Public Preview of Windows Small Business Server 7
    
		It's an exciting time for the  Microsoft Small Business Specialist Community. The testing and rollout phase of  a new version of Windows Small Business Server always promises new opportunities,  but this year, Microsoft is experimenting with different formats for the  product.
Microsoft released a public preview  on Tuesday for the next version of SBS, code-named Windows  Small Business Server "7." The product itself is the basic update  that usually follows an upgrade of the underlying server. In this case the  upgraded server is Windows Server 2008 R2.
Major features of SBS 7 include the  first service pack for Microsoft Exchange 2010, Microsoft SharePoint Foundation  2010, improved security and management, better file and print handling and  simplified procedures for providing Internet and e-mail access to end users.
But this test version of the  successor to Small Business Server 2008 is the second small business server of  the new generation to go to the community. A month ago, a preview version went  out for "Aurora," a cloud computing-enabled version of SBS for  companies with fewer than 25 users. Stay tuned for a technical review of Aurora in the October  issue of Redmond Channel Partner magazine from J. Peter Bruzzese.
Microsoft intends Aurora as a "first server" for the  smallest customers, giving partners another potential tool, along with  peer-to-peer networking and the Business Productivity Online Suite, to crack  this often-hard-to-reach market. SBS 7 will accommodate firms with  up to 75 users. Meanwhile, a previous example  of Microsoft's constant tinkering with its mix of products for this space, the  short-lived Windows Essentials Business Server, was recently discontinued for  organizations that are just a bit larger than the typical SBS customer. For  those small midsize customers, it's back to the full stack of Microsoft  servers.
See Kurt   Mackie's coverage  of the SBS 7 preview launch.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 22, 2010