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2/28/2008
Redmond literally rolled out the blue carpet for the 4,000 IT professionals, developers, staff and partners who attended its official launch event for Windows Server 2008, Visual Studio 2008, and SQL Server 2008 Wednesday in Los Angeles.
While the launch wasn't actually timed with the products' releases--Visual Studio 2008 was released in November, Windows Server 2008 is being released March 1, and SQL Server 2008 is coming later this year--Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer used his keynote at the Nokia Theatre Wednesday morning to promote how the products will work together to create a "dynamic IT" infrastructure for enterprises.
Following a short introductory speech by veteran television journalist Tom Brokaw addressing how technology can make lives better for millions worldwide, Ballmer took the stage and dove right into the company's "Heroes Happen Here" launch theme.
"To me the heart of this industry are the software developers and IT professionals who go out every day and make great things happen," he commented, "working every day to make their companies better ... building new solutions, getting them deployed."
"[These products are] simply the enablers for the types of heroes represented here in this room and in the IT and software development community worldwide."
For Windows Server 2008--which has been released to manufacturing and is scheduled to go live March 1--Ballmer focused heavily on its role in the company's overall virtualization strategy. In fact, the server's built-in virtualization solution, Hyper-V, took the No. 1 spot in one of the keynote's slide showing the top 10 innovations in the product.
"Today we launch our virtualization strategy in earnest," he said. "We want to democratize virtualization," making it easy, efficient, interoperable and cheap enough to run on as many servers as a company desires, he said.
"The thing that is quite unique about our approach to virtualization is that we take virtualization as just a piece of overall management," he continued. "You don't manage [virtualization], you manage a datacenter."
Hyper-V will come in beta form with Windows Server 2008; a final version is expected to debut during the third quarter.
Ballmer also spoke about what Microsoft feels Visual Studio 2008 is bringing to the development community.
"We live in a world where the need for speed [in] developing new solutions, new applications ... has never been higher," he commented. "Visual Studio 2008 brings technologies for building new, rich Web applications very rapidly ... the ability and speed at which someone can write an application has never been stronger."
He also promoted the strength of IIS 7, of which he said is "the best platform, bar none, for hosting Web applications either in a shared or nonshared environment."
In May in San Francisco, experts from leading universities, libraries, and research institutions around the world met as part of an ongoing effort to address a pressing issue: archiving the world's history, right up to today.
The Quilt, a coalition of 28 regional network organizations, has added XO Communications Services to its authorized vendor list. The Quilt represents 200 universities and thousands of other educational institutions across the United States. With this new relationship, Quilt members can purchase XO's high-speed IP transit and network transport services at competitive rates.
At the NECC 2008 conference in Texas this week, Wimba launched a new version of Wimba Classroom, the virtual classroom component of the company's Collaboration Suite. The new 5.2 release expands options for classroom capture and adds a variety of other functional and ease of use features.
The lure of automating workflow online so human intervention is minimized is continually reinforced in the minds of higher education administrators by examples of automated campus systems such as financials, student information systems, and other enterprise systems. But what's good for management is not always good for learning.
Cognos, which IBM acquired in January, has released an update to its business intelligence software that will run on the Linux operating system on IBM System z mainframes. IBM Cognos 8 BI was being developed by the two companies prior to the acquisition, but assimilation of Cognos into IBM accelerated development.
Facebook is a way to greet a colleague as if she or he is on your own campus: a wave at a distance, a hello at the corner burrito place, a honk as you both leave the campus parking lot. Informal collegiality has been extended over the miles.