atom beingexchanged: Something Old, Something New

Monday, November 9, 2009

Something Old, Something New

As many of you know, Exchange Server 2010 Released To Manufacturing (RTM) today, with TechNET and MSDN releases to follow later this week.  There are a ton of new features, like Database Availability Groups and Archiving and compliance put in place in this version, so it’s a big step for Microsoft.  As you might expect, I’ll be writing quite a few articles on the new features as Exchange 2010 rolls out.

In the meantime, a recent 180 degree turn by Microsoft on support for Exchange 2007 has extended the theoretical useful lifetime of that platform by quite a bit.  It may not be time to start writing off Exchange 2007 just yet =)

As reported by Mary-Jo Foley in this ZDNet Blog post, MSFT has announced that they will continue to support Exchange 2007 into the Server 2008 R2 platform.  Prior to this point, official support for Exchange 2007 would end on the Server 2008 RTM platform, limiting the lifespan of the 2007 product to the 2008 RTM server. That wasn’t going to be tomorrow, or anything like that, but it certainly would be a shorter time-span than if Exchange 2007 got R2 support. 

Yielding to immense pressure from the end-user community, MSFT did acknowledge that not everyone was ready to upgrade to Exchange 2010.  There were no details on exactly when an update for Ex2007 would be available for R2, but suspicions are that it will be done via either a Roll Up or possibly even a new Service Pack early in calendar 2010.  Traditionally, this type of compatibility update had been done as part of a Service Pack, so my bet is riding on that idea.

Either way, the news that Exchange 2007 will live on to Server 2008 R2 is welcome.  This allows organizations who are in the middle of roll outs to not worry about if their servers are installed with Server 2008 RTM or R2, and will allow those migrations to complete on the 2007 platform.  This, in turn, allows upgrades to 2010 to occur without being rushed due to OS incompatibility issues.  There is something to be said for the fact that this decision will slow adoption of Exchange 2010 overall, but it will mean better, more structured roll-outs over time.  Safer, stronger and better planned upgrades are never a bad thing.

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