all those Windows Residential home Server (WHS) loyalists hoping towards wish that Microsoft may reconsider its selection to lower Drive Extender through the coming ‘Vail’ release, your prayers have NOT been answered. is delivering the Release Candidate (RC) test build of Vail — Windows Family home Server 2011 – February 3, and there is no Drive Extender included. There’s also no Drive Extender in “Aurora” — Small Business Server 2011 Essentials – Vail sibling for which Microsoft also is delivering an RC build today. (Aurora is a hybrid cloud-on-premises small-business server, for these who need a refresher.) case there is any confusion: Drive Extender is gone. It is not coming back. Period. the Vail and Aurora RCs are public,
win 7 home basic generator, and available for download as of 10 a.m. PT today via the Microsoft Connect site. Microsoft is calling these the “final, pre-release versions” of both products, with the release-to-manufacturing (RTM) code due in the first half of calendar 2011. WHS team signed off on the RC earlier this week, as the tweet, pictured above — which the team quickly removed — indicated.) RC version of the products includes a new wizard for deploying storage and migrating folders. The wizard simplifies the process of detecting storage, formatting a disk,
cheap microsoft office Pro Plus 2007, assigning a volume and moving a folder to the new volume, according to Microsoft officials. Microsoft also is making available “Learning Bites for Essentials,” which are 10 five-to-six-minute videos that go through self-service IT tasks available to individuals using the Small Business Server 2011 Essentials product. selection by Microsoft to minimize Drive Extender from Vail late last year made for a lot of unhappy Vail users and testers. A number of them created a petition, requesting Microsoft reconsider its selection. Despite the thousands of (mostly angry) comments, the Drive Extender lobbying has not influenced the team. Extender,
discount office 2010 64 bit, which was part of the first Windows Property Server release, provided for storage pooling of multiple hard drives and automated data duplication. Microsoft officials minimize the feature after they (indirectly) said it was too buggy to merit inclusion in the final products. Microsoft is advising customers to use products from various storage OEMs instead. seen rumors that some members of the Vail team, unhappy with the product’s directions,
office Standard 2010 x86 key, were seeking to “decouple” itself through the other small-business server teams at Microsoft and be moved to a different part of the company. But Director of Windows Server Marketing Manlio Vecchiet said that was not a possibility (or even something he had heard about). with the RCs, Microsoft provided an update to the “Colorado” platform software development kit,
windows 7 enterprise 32 bit, which provides information and tools for developing add-ins to extend Windows Small Business Server 2011 Essentials. curious to see what testers who are still interested in Vail and all those kicking the tires of Aurora think of the near-final RC builds….