Small Business Server and Beyond..
July 4, 2012 1 Comment
An announcement has finally been made about the future plans for the SBS Product lines.
In 2011 the SBS Product team launched a new version of SBS, SBS Essentials, this was the first product in the SBS line not to include Exchange , it also was missing other components like SharePoint and WSUS.
The concept for this product was that it would integrate tightly with Cloud providers. At this time, many could see the writing on the wall for On Premises SBS with Exchange…
SBS Standard
If you have been patiently waiting for the next release of Small Business Server Standard, with the Windows Server 2012 Operating System updates, sadly, you will be disappointed to learn that this SBS 2011 Standard is the last planned release of the Small Business Server Standard product SKU.
Let me clear that up, and say that there are currently no plans for any future Windows Operating System to include an Integrated Domain Controller, Exchange Server, SharePoint Server or WSUS Server.
The Premium Add-on (PAO) Component will also not be refreshed. SQL Server 2012 does not have a Small Business edition, meaning that they apparently cannot include that.
Which seems a little odd to me, as SQL 2008 for SMB, was just a modified version of SQL Standard that would only install in an SBS Domain.
SBS 2011 Standard will remain available through various channels until Q4 of 2013.
For those of you thinking about Software Assurance..
http://download.microsoft.com/download/WS2012_Licensing-Pricing_FAQ.pdf2
Q.36: If you have Software Assurance on Small Business Server 2011 Standard edition, you will receive one Windows Server 2012 Standard edition license and one Exchange Server Standard 2010 license.
This grant will be reflected upon your agreement renewal; however you are entitled to use the granted product upon availability.
SBS Essentials
The product you all know and love as Small Business Server 2011 Essentials, will be rebranded and refreshed onto the Windows Server 2012 platform.
The new name is Windows Server 2012 Essentials.
I haven’t decided whether i will call it WSE, or WES, but i think we should come to some agreement as it might get confusing. Of course WSE could be Storage Server Essentials, which, at this point at least, remains untouched. WES rolls off the tongue a little easier than WSE, but could perhaps give the false impression the name is Windows Essentials Server, i may play it cool and type WSE, but speak ‘Dub-S-E’ ; Dub being short for W of course, but then that could lead people to think that i mean SSE (DUB S, double S) which in turn could lead people to think i mean WSSE, and by that point i think people will have lost interest. You may well now be asking yourself why drop SBS in the first place, i mean, just look at the mess the last paragraph has ended up in!
There will not be a new version of Home Server. WSE has incorporated ‘Media Streaming’ it will now also act as a Domain Controller in your home, which is what apparently all that great feedback has told Microsoft you guys want.
Now, the SBS MVPs and Home Server MVPs have suggested this may be a little off the mark, but we are assured that the surveys have told them they are right.
We are also aware, but cannot confirm, the survey sample was 12 companies in Hong Kong.
If all of that is too much for you to take in, i sympathise! Just remember SBS Standard would want you to be happy, it would want you to move on..
More details surrounding WES will no doubt appear over the coming weeks.
http://www.windowsserveressentials.com
http://msmvps.com/blogs/bradley/
http://www.nogeekleftbehind.com
http://www.nci-technologies.co.uk/blog/
http://blogs.technet.com/b/sbs/
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/server-cloud/windows-server/2012-editions.aspx
http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/category/sbsserver
Thanks for this summary – it’s difficult to work out the bones of the announcement and this really helps. I’m looking for alternative options now – I have clients on SBS in the UK with very poor internet connections for whom hosted Exchange never worked (tried it and it just constantly hung Outlook or made it crawl if someone decided to download something from the itnernet and hog what little available bandwidth there was). On premises Exchange has been great for them.