Ray Ozzie was a quiet presence in Redmond, but he left deep footprints throughout  Microsoft's global operation that will last for years.
Ozzie  is stepping down as chief software architect and preparing to retire,  according to an employee e-mail that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer sent out Monday.
"He will remain with the company as he transitions the  teams and ongoing strategic projects within his organization -- bringing the  great innovations and great innovators he's assembled into the groups driving  our business," Ballmer wrote. "Following the natural transition time  with his teams but before he retires from Microsoft, Ray will be focusing his  efforts in the broader area of entertainment where Microsoft has many ongoing  investments."
Ozzie  joined Microsoft in 2005 when the company bought Groove Networks and took  on Bill Gates' secondary title of chief software architect a year later as part  of the Gates' retirement transition plan. Ozzie was said to have been most  comfortable working in small groups and sharing ideas on a whiteboard, and he  reportedly suffered from stage fright before large crowds. He made a huge  splash early with the Internet Services  Disruption memo that he wrote and that Gates forwarded to the rest of the  company. But since then, except for a few high-profile magazine profiles and a handful  of speeches and interviews,  he has largely faded from the public eye.
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With Ozzie's history in collaboration, especially with Lotus  Notes and Groove Networks, some look for his effect in Microsoft's  collaboration technologies, and find his influence wanting. But that misses  Ozzie's main task, which was to help Microsoft bridge the gap from 1990s  dominance to 21st century relevance. Ozzie found that bridge in the cloud and  worked relatively quietly, but steadily, on the project.
Ozzie's largest and most tangible footprints are the massive  datacenters that Microsoft has been building since 2007. Media reports  described Ozzie poring over reports on available electricity and other factors  in choosing sites for the facilities. Meanwhile, Microsoft has received notice  for innovations in datacenter design around cooling and power consumption. So far,  Microsoft now has mega-datacenters costing about $500 million each in Quincy, Wash.; San Antonio, Texas; Dublin, Ireland;  and Chicago.  Officials in Virginia recently announced  another facility coming in the southern Virginia  lakeside town of Boydton.
Smaller Ozzie footprints will be evident in the Windows  Azure Platform Appliance containers, a strategic advance which could help  Microsoft spread its cloud to organizations around the world where laws,  regulation or policy require data to reside inside national borders or  organizational walls.
Ozzie's other footprints are evident in the array of cloud  services Microsoft now offers across nearly its entire product base. Ballmer  acknowledged as much in his company-wide e-mail.
"As a company, we've accomplished much in the past five  years as we look at the cloud and services. Windows Live now serves as a  natural web-based services complement to both Windows and Office. SharePoint  and Exchange have now decidedly embraced the cloud. And by conceiving,  incubating and shepherding Windows Azure, Ray helped ensure we have a  tremendously rich platform foundation that will enable app-level innovation  across the company and by customers for years to come."
"With our   progress in services and the cloud now full speed ahead in all aspects  of our business, Ray and I are announcing today Ray's intention to step down  from his role as chief software architect," Ballmer wrote.
Ozzie's was nothing less than a visionary transformation of  Microsoft, fully in line with the title of chief software architect. Ballmer  says the position isn't being refilled.
The time for setting the cloud vision and planning the datacenter  infrastructure to support the vision is passed. Ozzie's finished that job, and,  frankly, given his personality, he's not the right person for the next part –  evangelizing and selling Microsoft's cloud. Ballmer has been taking up that  baton aggressively .See his speeches in March ("we're all in"), at the Microsoft  Worldwide Partner Conference ("Oh, cloud") and this  month ("cloud, cloud, cloud, cloud, cloud").
To paraphrase the quote famously attributed to Ben Franklin  about a republic, Ray Ozzie has given Microsoft a potential leadership position  in cloud computing, if Microsoft can keep it.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 19, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		 Microsoft is going wild with the "president" title. Just last  week, CEO Steve Ballmer took the opportunity presented by one departing  president (Stephen Elop) to  bestow the big title on three people. The new presidents are Don. Mattrick  (Interactive Entertainment Business), Kurt DelBene (Microsoft Office Division)  and Andy Lees (Mobile Communications Business). Congratulations are in order  for all three of these executives, of course.
Call me old school, but, to me, president and CEO are basically one  title. You pick one or the other and everybody else is some grade of VP.  Microsoft's title conventions are starting to remind of the "but it goes  to 11" bit from the movie Spinal Tap.
A cursory review of the Microsoft Executive Biographies page reveals  seven presidents now. In addition to the three new ones, there's Steven  Sinofsky (Windows & Windows Live Division), Bob Muglia (Server & Tools  Business), Qi Lu (Online Services Division) and Jean-Philippe Courtois  (Microsoft International).
That's not counting those who have president or CEO or chairman as some  part of their titles, in many cases for the legitimate purposes of running a  subsidiary. That category includes Robert Youngjohns, senior vice president and  president, North America Sales & Marketing; Umberto Paolucci, senior  chairman, Microsoft EMEA (he's also a corporate vice president); Yasuyuki  Higuchi, president & CEO, Microsoft Co. Ltd., Japan (he's also a corporate  vice president); and Simon Leung, corporate vice president and chairman and  CEO, Microsoft Greater China Region.
On a more consequential note, the Microsoft Business Solutions  (Dynamics) product group is being moved out of the Microsoft Office Division.  CVP Kirill Tatarinov runs Dynamics and will report directly to Ballmer. Does  this mean, we'll start to see hard figures for the Dynamics business in  Microsoft's quarterly filings with the Securities & Exchange Commission? I'm  keeping my fingers crossed for greater transparency, but I wouldn't be  surprised if the results remain buried under other line items.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 04, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft is quietly building out a partner catalog in the two-week-old  Microsoft Dynamics Marketplace, a beta version of Microsoft's answer to the  Salesforce.com AppExchange.
Microsoft announced at its Worldwide Partner Conference in  July that it would be launching the Microsoft Dynamics Marketplace in  September. A Microsoft spokesperson said the intention all along was to  launch a beta in September, not the full-fledged portal for customer-partner  connections.
"Microsoft Dynamics Marketplace went into beta on Sept.  16 and is a searchable repository of custom solutions and extensions to help  accelerate and/or extend the value of Microsoft Dynamics. This beta is an  important milestone on the road to the final delivery of the Microsoft Dynamics  Marketplace service later this year and available in English and German in  eight countries including the United States, the U.K., Canada, India,  Australia, Germany, Switzerland and Austria," the spokesperson said in an  e-mailed statement.
"Today customers have the ability to discover, download  and try applications as well as directly connect with partners and service  providers if they decide to purchase an application. We are also encouraging  partners to sign up to be part of this service as well as upload their  solutions onto this service to give customers a broad choice of solutions to  meet their specific business needs when the service goes live," the  spokesperson said.
There is measurable momentum within the Dynamics Marketplace  beta, which the company announced to partners and customers on the Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online Team Blog on  Sept. 20. We've heard Microsoft has been driving Dynamics ISVs hard to get  their CRM applications listed. We've also heard from partners that Microsoft's  push will extend to the ERP channel sometime after the first of the year.
For now, text on the beta homepage is currently entirely CRM-focused:  "The Microsoft Dynamics Marketplace is an online service from Microsoft to  help you: Get expert help to deploy Microsoft Dynamics CRM. Find a service  provider to host and manage your CRM solutions. Discover applications tailored  for your individual business needs."
Customers will be able to search broadly for applications,  professional services or companies. As of Sept. 30, the beta's directory  included 233 application listings, 413 professional services offerings and 392  company listings.
Although the CRM Team Blog announcing the beta points users  to www.microsoft.com/dynamics/marketplace,  the page redirects to a Pinpoint URL (dynamics.pinpoint.microsoft.com).  According to the beta site's About section, "The Microsoft Dynamics  Marketplace is the first of several product marketplaces to rollout in 2010 and  2011 that will be powered by Pinpoint search engines." So, love Pinpoint  or hate it, that's what runs the new Dynamics Marketplace.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 30, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The case surrounding Stuxnet, which some security and  intelligence specialists are calling the first known precision malware weapon designed  to bring down a specific real-world industrial facility, is getting curiouser.
As researchers untangled the encryption and complex code base,  suspicion has grown that Stuxnet was created by U.S. or Israeli intelligence in  order to disrupt a specific Iranian nuclear facility. (RCP unpacked Stuxnet's  nasty implications for the Microsoft channel in a  blog post earlier this week. The worm uses four zero-day Windows  vulnerabilities as part of its attack.)
A front-page  article in The New York Times today moves the story forward with news that the text string "Myrtus,"  found within the Stuxnet code, is at the center of much of the debate about who  might be behind Stuxnet's development.
According to the Times: "Myrtus is an allusion to the  Hebrew word for Esther. The Book of Esther tells the story of a Persian plot  against the Jews, who attacked their enemies pre-emptively."
The debate, according to the newspaper, currently centers on  whether an Esther reference is the correct interpretation of the Stuxnet code  string, and if so, whether it represents a smoking gun or a red herring. This  case is as subtle and fascinating as a John Le Carre novel.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 30, 20102 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft is supposed to flip the switch for many of the  most significant elements of its Microsoft Partner Network sometime in October,  a month which, you may have noticed, is upon us.
But October 2011 is shaping up as a key month for the MPN as well. In a document on the public  portion of Microsoft's Partner Portal called "Prepare for the Microsoft  Partner Network," the year-ahead month crops up several times.
It's especially relevant to partners concerned about the MPN  transition away from the Microsoft Gold Certified Partner and the Microsoft Certified  Partner levels. While partners won't be able to re-enroll in the Microsoft  Partner Network at those levels after the switch happens at some unspecified  date this October -- they will be able to hang onto the logos for awhile.
According to the site: "Continue to use the logos you  have today. After October 2011, the current Certified Partner and Gold  Certified Partner logos will be retired since we're shifting to silver  competencies and gold competencies. All partners must discontinue their use of  these old logos by October 2011."
That said, the old logos won't be available for download  after October 2010 for partners who haven't already obtained them.
How do you view this policy? Is it a nod to the challenges  of distributing new branding to a massive network of partners? Or is it an  opportunity to lobby Microsoft for another 12 months to reverse its decision to  retire the Gold Certified Partner and Certified Partner levels? Let me know at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 30, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft this week is introducing a sensible addition to  the Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite -- an uptime dashboard.
Called the Microsoft Online Service Health Dashboard, the  online display shows the status of various BPOS components in green (good),  yellow (slow) and red (down) icons. A Microsoft screenshot of the dashboard  shows the tool monitoring subscription services including Exchange Online Mailflow,  Exchange Online Outlook Connectivity, Exchange Online ActiveSync, Forefront  Online Protection for Exchange, Hosted BlackBerry, Outlook Web Access,  SharePoint Online, Office Communications Online and Office Live Meeting. The  tool also monitors BPOS administrative services, and partner-specific cuts of  data are available.
Charles Van Heusen, a partner technology advisor with  Microsoft's TS2 Team, announced the tool in a blog posting Wednesday covered by my colleague Kurt Mackie.
Heusen wrote that the tool is designed to answer the  question, "How do we know when there are service interruptions from the  Online services verses networking issues with our own service provider or our  network"?
 
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 30, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		An odd thing has been happening in the Microsoft channel over  the last few years. Every Microsoft partner we ask tells us they're getting  less marketing money and other direct investments from Redmond than they got in  the past. Yet every year, the amount Microsoft says it invests in the channel  goes up.
After the Worldwide Partner Conference, we thought that  maybe this year Microsoft had given up on the storyline of ever-increasing  partner investments. The usual bearer of the good news, Chief Operating Officer  Kevin Turner, didn't mention partner investments in his WPC  keynote, sticking, instead, to data points about research and development  investment. (He said that could reach $9.5 billion in Microsoft's FY 2011.)
It was Turner's WPC speech in 2009 that Microsoft used to  announce a $3.3 billion investment in partners for FY '10. The year before, the  company said it was spending $2.9 billion, and the year before that, $2.3  billion.
But Microsoft is kicking around another big number for 2011  after all. According to a statement on Microsoft's Partner Portal, "Microsoft  has always been committed to partners and invests over $4 billion per year -- more  than any other technology company." That would be a massive $700 million  increase year-over-year.
Unlike last year when I wrote a  similar, head-scratching post about Microsoft's stated level of partner  investment, I do have a theory this year. I'll flesh it out in RCP's November  issue. Stay tuned!
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 30, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Over the last week, security researchers have revealed  progress in untangling the fiendishly complex encryption and massive code base  of the Stuxnet malware -- and what they say they've found is one of the most  interesting developments in the computer security landscape in years.
The Christian Science  Monitor online newspaper last week reported, "Some top cyber security experts now say Stuxnet's arrival heralds  something blindingly new: a cyber weapon created to cross from the digital  realm to the physical world -- to destroy something."
The Monitor article was primarily based on interviews with German cyber-security researcher  Ralph Langner, ahead of a speech Langner gave on Stuxnet in Rockville, Md.  last week. Langner and his Hamburg-based team have been reverse engineering  Stuxnet, which emerged in June, but is only now yielding some of its secrets.
"With the forensics we now have it is evident and  provable that Stuxnet is a  directed sabotage attack involving heavy insider knowledge," Langer  wrote on his Web site.
Although thousands of systems have been infected by the  worm, which combined four zero-day Windows flaws, the picture that is emerging  now is that all but one of those systems may be collateral damage.
According to Langner's analysis, Stuxnet was one piece in a  military/intelligence operation conducted by a technically sophisticated nation  state to target and destroy one specific real-world facility by compromising  industrial process control software via a contractor's infected USB memory  stick. Langner speculated that the target may have been Iran's Bushehr  nuclear power plant. Other reports suggest other Iranian facilities involved in  the nuclear weapons production arena.
Over the weekend, an Iranian official was quoted as saying  the worm was "part of the electronic warfare against Iran." An article in The New York Times on Sunday  quoted James Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and  International Studies in Washington, saying that the United States is "one  of four or five places that could have done it   -- the Israelis, the British and the Americans are the prime suspects,  then the French and Germans, and you can't rule out the Russians and the  Chinese."
The nation-state perpetrator  theory isn't unanimous, however. John Pescatore, vice president for internet  security at Gartner, told The Guardian newspaper in the United  Kingdom that it was "definitely not the case" that Stuxnet would have  required state sponsorship.
A Headache for  Partners
Microsoft appears to be in full panic mode about Stuxnet.  Witness RCPU Editor Lee Pender's innocuous recent link to a Stuxnet item that prompted  an immediate reply from Microsoft. The Microsoft response to Stuxnet is  justifiably alarmist because the case threatens to reinvigorate a host of  thorny, but largely dormant, issues about Windows security, proprietary source  code, state security and even possible Microsoft collusion with United States'  government intelligence agencies. As Microsoft's front line for sales and end  user services, Microsoft partners will be the ones taking fire.
At a base level, all Microsoft partners involved with  supporting customers on Windows need to understand the basics of the Microsoft  Stuxnet bulletins and patches, and it's a good time to re-evaluate security  policies and protections around USB sticks.
A Manufacturing  Problem
Manufacturing integrators and ISVs, meanwhile, have a new  set of concerns. Stuxnet provides a step-by-step guide for taking over a  programmable logic controller (PLC) on an industrial control system. Anybody  involved in installing or programming control systems will need to be ready to  address and explain the threat.
According to Langner, it's not technically difficult to  inject what he calls "rogue ladder logic" into PLC programs. (The  rogue ladder logic affects the industrial control software, in this case  Siemens, not Windows.)
"It is important to understand that this vulnerability  cannot be considered a bug, either technically or legally, so it should not be  expected that vendors would be able to release a 'patch,'" Langner said on  his site.
Langner predicted that exploit code based on vulnerabilities  used by Stuxnet will make their way into known frameworks like Metasploit  within a few months. "The Stuxnet story will raise a lot of attention in  the hacker community where people may now start to try using the attack vector  for much more trivial motivations than we must assume for the Stuxnet writers,"  he warned.
Langner also listed a number of basic security procedures  that manufacturing integrators can re-emphasize with customers that would help  prevent a Stuxnet-style attack from reaching critical control systems. They  included defining and enforcing a high security level for engineering stations,  especially mobile ones; prohibiting staff from using the stations for private  purposes; securing the systems with whitelisting solutions; defining and  enforcing a high security level for contractors; removing shared folders;  removing critical systems from the network; reviewing policies for remote  access; implementing a zoning concept for the network; and using PLC version  control systems.
Reviving Political  Questions
The biggest Stuxnet problems for Microsoft, however, are  what we'll call the political issues. And these will be problems for Microsoft's  global systems integrators, global ISVs and Microsoft partners in the  international subsidiaries, although U.S.-based partners with highly security  conscious customers can expect to be dragged into these conversations, as well.
Microsoft faces four intertwined political issues. Two of  them arise from being a multinational corporation headquartered within the  world's most powerful nation state. Several years ago, Microsoft faced pushback  from China  about whether it was appropriate for Chinese government, military and business  computers to run on an operating system created in another country. Related to  that issue is the persistent rumor that Microsoft has either voluntarily or  under duress created a backdoor for the U.S. National Security Agency to gain  access to Windows-based computers. This rumor comes up at every OS release,  including with Windows 7, and Microsoft takes it seriously enough to issue  formal statements denying any backdoor.
While much of the early speculation points to Israel  as the source of the worm, NSA involvement is a close second. The New York Times reported that former  President George W. Bush had authorized efforts to undermine electrical  systems, computer networks and other networks that serve Iran's nuclear  programs, and the paper reported that the efforts have been ramped up under the  Obama Administration. The combination of NSA suspicion and Windows flaws should  give new life to international conspiracy theories about collusion. (When it  comes to talking a strong stand against government encroachment, Microsoft didn't  help its case any here with the recent revelations that Russian  authorities piggybacked on Microsoft's software piracy campaign to crack  down on dissident groups.)
The other political issues involve the technology fights  within the IT community. The whole Stuxnet incident will be another data point  in reviving arguments that Windows is less secure than other operating systems.  Meanwhile, the issue is new grist for open source advocates, who will use the  case to argue that Microsoft's proprietary approach to its code is a problem.
Let's all keep our fingers crossed that Microsoft wasn't  short-sighted enough to cooperate in any way with a national authority in  keeping zero-day exploits open. It would have been colossally stupid, and there's  no need -- smaller actors than nation states find zero-day exploits in Windows  software often enough. Put some dedicated resources and talent behind an effort  and success in finding new zero-day exploits is a matter of time.
Probably the best line of defense for partners in all of the  above circumstances is to be familiar with the string of Stuxnet-specific  security responses from the Microsoft  Security Response Center, and be ready to point to the generally positive  notices that Microsoft has been receiving lately about the speed and  thoroughness of their security responses.
In any case, Microsoft partners will need to pull those  Microsoft-provided security playbooks off the shelves where they've been  collecting dust for the last couple of years. Thanks to Stuxnet, the political  disputes around Microsoft software are about to get hot again.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 27, 20102 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The Forbes 400 list of the Richest People in America  came out Wednesday and it lists Microsoft Chairman Bill  Gates on top once again, with $54 billion. As Forbes puts it, "The  software king is not the world's richest man, but that's because he is the most  generous person on the planet: To date he has cut checks totaling $28 billion."
The Gates fortune is up $4 billion from a year ago, but down  $3 billion from 2008 and down $5 billion from 2007, according to Forbes. While  Gates' money seems to be working its way back toward those peaks, it remains  above the relative trough it occupied for most of the 2000s, when it dipped as  low -- if that's really the right word -- as $43 billion, according to Forbes'  figures.
Others who owe their fortunes to Microsoft in the Forbes 400  include Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, ranked No. 16 with $13.1 billion, and  cofounder Paul Allen, No. 17 with $12.7 billion. The closest technologist in  net worth to Gates is Oracle founder Larry Ellison, ranked No. 3 at $27  billion. Gates' bridge and philanthropy buddy, Warren Buffett, provides a  welcome buffer on the Forbes list between the two technology billionaires, who  frequently stand on opposite sides of technology fights.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 23, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I was gearing up to jump down Microsoft's throat late last  week after I saw Twitter traffic from Microsoft partners reporting that they  were getting error messages when trying to use the new  Internet Explorer 9 beta on the Microsoft Partner Portal. To quote Wayne  Beekman's tweet early Thursday, "Installed #IE9 and @microsoft Partner  Member Center Page will not load …"
Partners are urged constantly by Microsoft to test Microsoft's  beta software aggressively so they can represent said software equally  aggressively to customers.
Well, it turns out that Microsoft didn't mean for the Partner  Portal to reject IE9. An RCP test on Friday with IE9 on the portal worked fine.  Eric Ligman, Microsoft's Global Partner Experience Lead, sent out a series of  Tweets Friday afternoon to Beekman and other partners Friday afternoon reporting that the issue had been fixed.
Later Friday evening, a Microsoft spokesperson e-mailed a  reply to a question about the issue that I had posed that morning. According to  the e-mail, "The MS Partner Portal issue you flagged this morning was not  related to IE9 compatibility, but instead, was caused by a minor configuration  file issue that was quickly fixed by our Web team. At this point, the issue has  been resolved and partners should be able to access the MS Partner Portal as  normal."
Am I thrilled that the Partner Portal wasn't completely  ready for duty when the IE9 beta hit testers last week? No. But this kind of  thing is what beta periods are for, at least for companies not named Google. I'm  very glad to see that the Microsoft Partner Portal, an important resource, is  fully part of the Microsoft roadmap for new technologies.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 23, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It appears that the Windows Intune Beta 2 was pretty  popular.
In a blog post this week, Alex Heaton, group product manager  for Windows Intune, announced that Microsoft is no longer accepting new users  for the Windows  Intune testing program, which entered the Beta 2 phase on July 12.
Windows Intune is a cloud-based version of the desktop  management capabilities customers could previously get by deploying Microsoft  System Center technologies. Microsoft is positioning the product as both an  end-user focused tool for midsize organizations' IT departments and as a tool  for managed services providers to use to manage and secure their customers'  environments. We covered the issues and potential surrounding the product's viability as an  MSP tool in the September issue.
"Current beta participants can continue to use the  Windows Intune beta and provide feedback until the next release," Heaton  wrote in his blog. "We expect Windows Intune to be generally available in  2011."
Those interested in notifications of future Windows Intune  releases can sign up here.
So how popular has Intune been? Microsoft opened the first  beta on April 19 and filled the 1,000 tester slots in less than 24 hours. The  company expanded the scope of the second beta to 10,000 testers and opened the  registration from North American-only to include several European countries.  Presumably, Microsoft has now filled those 10,000 slots.
Microsoft hasn't said how many of the testers are IT end  users and how many are partners, taking advantage of features like the  MSP-focused Multi-Account Console that was introduced in the Beta 2 phase.
Do you hold one of the coveted Beta 2 spots? I'd like to  hear about your experiences with the Beta 2 of Windows Intune at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 23, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		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, 20100 comments