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        Microsoft To Release SQL Server 2012 SP2 'Later This Year'
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- February 14, 2014
Service Pack 2 (SP2) for SQL Server 2012  will arrive  "later this year," Microsoft announced on Thursday.
Microsoft's announcement noted that the earlier generation SQL Server 2008 products will lose "mainstream"  product support on July  8, 2014. The end of mainstream support comes  about midway in Microsoft's 10-year  product lifecycle for business products and signifies the loss of some  perks, such as   no-charge incident support, warranty claims and responses to  feature   requests by customers.
Microsoft first released SQL Server 2012 back in April 2012.  SP1 arrived in November of that year. That SP1 release coincided  with the PASS Summit event.   This year's PASS Summit event for SQL server  professionals happens   during the week of Nov. 4, so that might be  when SP2 for   SQL Server 2012 might appear.
Microsoft announced a new,  faster release pace for its products late last year, and has suggested that  service pack   releases won't be the weighty events that they have been for IT  pros.   For instance, on the Exchange side, SP1 for Exchange 2013, which will    arrive early this year, will be the equivalent  of Cumulative Update 4. 
Some technology reporters have claimed that Microsoft has now    eliminated service packs altogether. However, Microsoft still appears to   be  using that service pack nomenclature, at least for 2012 products.   Per Microsoft's definition, a  service pack can contain new customer-requested design features, along with a  collection of updates and security fixes.
Still, organizations updating SQL Server have the unenviable  task of   trying to figure out what Microsoft has released, and installing    service packs has been a shortcut for busy IT pros to get it all wrapped   up in  a single release. For instance, Microsoft lists all of the   Cumulative Update builds  that were released after SP1 for SQL Server   2012 at this page. 
However, IT pro Kendra Little cautions in an overview  article,   published by the Brent Ozar Unlimited consultancy, that Cumulative    Updates should only be installed if an organization is affected by a   particular  issue described in the update. 
Microsoft also issues hotfixes for problems existing in the  interim   before the next Cumulative Update release. Little recommends subscribing  to RSS feeds of Knowledge Base article releases to find out about those releases.
Microsoft's next relational database management product, SQL  Server 2014,   is currently released at the Community Technology Preview 2 test    stage, but it's due for some form of new release at the end of March.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.