Posts Tagged ‘Exchange’

Microsoft Dumps Windows Essential Business Server

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

As announced on the Windows Essential Business Server blog and confirmed on the EBS web site, Microsoft is discontinuing further development of Essential Business Server and will stop selling it from the end of June.  The announcement talks about the changing market landscape behind the decision, which sounds like a roundabout way of saying the thing didn’t sell.  That’s a pity, because it is actually quite an impressive product.

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Windows Phone 7 Series Announced

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Microsoft have announced that the next generation of their mobile phone operating system (currently known as Windows Mobile) will be Windows Phone 7 Series.  Microsoft have apparently pretty much started again with this one, so it promises to be a radical departure from previous versions in both usability and performance.

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Microsoft Exchange 14

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

The next version of Microsoft Exchange, according to rumour, will officially be called Microsoft Exchange Server 2010.  The name may be underwhelming, but some of the rumours regarding features are quite interesting.

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Windows Essential Business Server 2008

Friday, November 14th, 2008

In my last post I said I would cover Windows Essential Business Server 2008 in a future post, so here it is!

Essential Business Server 2008 is similar in concept to Small Business Server 2008 and they are both bracketed by Microsoft under the name of Windows Essential Server Solutions.  The difference is the target market.  While SBS 2008 is aimed squarely at the small business market, EBS 2008 is aimed at those organisations who have outgrown SBS 2008 and caters for up to 300 users.  As with SBS 2008, that user limit is a hard limit.

EBS 2008 is a suite of server products in one package, as for SBS 2008, but spread over more servers.  As for SBS 2008, there is a Standard and a Premium edition, with the Standard edition consisting of three servers and the Premium edition adding a fourth server.

The first server in either edition is designated as a Management Server.  This server comprises Windows Server 2008 Standard and System Center Essentials 2007.  It is compatible with SharePoint Services 3.0 and downloading and installing that product is an option during server setup, but SharePoint Services is not shipped with EBS 2008, which seems strange.  This server acts as a domain controller and provides network functions such as DNS, DHCP and WINS.  It is also the logical server to act as a file and print server.

The second server is the Messaging Server.  This server comprises Windows Server 2008 Standard, Exchange Server 2007 and a one-year subscription for Forefront Security for Exchange Server.  As the title implies, this server is pretty much dedicated to Exchange, i.e. e-mail, calendaring, etc.  This server handles the internal messaging requirements, but does not directly face the Internet.

The third server is the Security Server.  This server is Internet-facing and comprises Windows Server 2008 Standard, Exchange Server 2007 and Forefront Threat Management Gateway – Medium Business, including a one-year Web Anti-Malware subscription.  Forefront Threat Management Gateway is the successor to Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server.  This server acts as a firewall and security device for the network.  Exchange is included as a front end server, with all of the mailboxes being stored on the Messaging Server.

As mentioned, the Premium Edition adds a fourth server, which, as for SBS 2008, is a Database Server.  This server comprises Windows Server 2008 Standard and SQL Server 2008 Standard Edition.  This follows the new SBS 2008 practice of moving the resource-intensive SQL Server application to its own server for performance reasons.

Again, the three core servers are 64-bit only, but the Database server can be either 32-bit or 64-bit.  64-bit is becoming the new standard and I would certainly recommend that any business buying a new server from now on go 64-bit.

EBS 2008 has many of the same restrictions that SBS 2008 has - the user limit is a hard limit, the domain must be the root of the network forest, it doesn’t support child domains or Active Directory trusts – but these are unlikely to be of concern to the target market for this product.

EBS 2008 certainly appears to fill a gap.  Previously, businesses that had outgrown Small Business Server had to make the leap to licensing the individual components, but now there is a clear Windows Server pathway for business growth.

Small Business Server 2008

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

As a Microsoft Certified Partner we receive plenty of information from Microsoft about current and future releases of their products.  One that has really captured my attention recently is the upcoming launch of Windows Small Business Server 2008.  We work a lot with Windows Small Business Server 2003 at present, so I was very interested to see what will be included in the release version of SBS 2008.

The official launch date for the product is actually tomorrow (12/11/2008), but we have been looking at the product for a while now, through beta versions to the final release candidate.  SBS2008 continues with the simplified setup and maintenance of previous versions while upgrading the components to the latest versions and adding some new features.

For anyone who is not familiar with previous versions of SBS, it is a single server platform aimed at small businesses that includes the Windows Server operating system, Exchange for e-mail and calendaring and a firewall and database management system in the Premium edition.  All of these components are tied together with simplified administration consoles.  The package is priced at a point much less than the sum of the components, but with a hard limit of 75 users.

The components of SBS 2008 Standard are:

  • Windows Server 2008 Standard
  • Exchange Server 2007
  • SharePoint Services 3.0
  • Windows Server Update Services 3.0
  • 120-trial versions of Forefront Security for Exchange Server and Windows Live OneCare for Server
  • Integration with Office Live Small Business

The Premium edition includes all of the above plus SQL Server Standard 2008 for Small Business and, for the first time, a second copy of Windows Server 2008 Standard, so that the Premium components can be run on a second server.  This is a departure from previous versions that were single-server solutions only, and it is a welcome one in my opinion as running Exchange and SQL Server on the one box is a recipe for performance issues.  The second server can also be used to run Terminal Services, something that was not possible with previous versions.

One important thing to note is that SBS 2008 is a 64-bit system, so in most cases an upgrade to this version will require new hardware.  This is because Exchange 2007 is 64-bit only and fits with Microsoft’s move towards 64-bit architecture across the board.  The second server for the Premium edition can be 32-bit.

Something that has been removed in this version is ISA Server, Microsoft’s software firewall and web proxy, which was included in SBS 2000 and in the Premium edition of SBS 2003.  Most clients that I work with have external firewalls these days and having never been a huge fan of ISA Server, I don’t consider this to be a great loss.

For businesses who have outgrown SBS 2008, Microsoft have now released a new product called Essential Business Server, which is essentially an expanded version of SBS 2008 that runs on three or four servers and caters for up to 300 users.  Both SBS 2008 and EBS 2008 are being branded under the Windows Essential Server Solutions banner.  I will go through EBS 2008 in a future post.