Microsoft is set to begin has begun providing picked testers with entry to alpha versions of its Workplace 14 server wares.(Indeed,
Windows 7, I am aware I said just yesterday that no testers appeared to have O14 code yet. Well, surprise,
Office 2007 Serial, surprise,
Windows 7 Professional, some exterior testers say they;ve now received accessibility to documentation outlining what;s coming inside the imminent alpha develop .)Update: Right here;s Microsoft;s statement, delivered through a spokesperson on January thirteen:“Today Microsoft provided a select group of customers early accessibility to an Alpha version of Office server technologies. In spite of this, Microsoft is not disclosing information about the timing for a Beta version at this time.”Testers are going to being provided with early variations of the next release of SharePoint Server 14 — along with the promised Office Web apps (Webified variations of some of Microsoft;s key Office apps) which are tied to SharePoint 14. They are also getting SharePoint Services 14; Search Server 14; and Project Server 14. Microsoft also is offering the alpha testers with an early version of its identity server, codenamed “Geneva,
Office 2010 Key,” which the company is telling testers must be installed as a prerequisite for Workplace 14.Testers also said they are on tap to receive a brand new alpha SKU, designated as “Office for Sales 14.” (Stay tuned for my next post, which will be all about Office for Sales.)Microsoft isn;t planning to accept bug reports on the alpha versions of the Office 14 servers. Instead, company officials are telling testers to deploy the Workplace 14 wares on non-production Windows Server 2008 machines just to get an idea of what Microsoft is planning with its next slew of Workplace releases.Microsoft also told the alpha testers to expect a “first beta”of Office 14 later this year.Yesterday, when I was chatting with Rajesh Jha, Corporate Vice President of Workplace Live and Exchange, I asked him for a timetable for Workplace 14. He said to expect Microsoft to update customers “later this quarter” about its rollout and release plans for Office 14.Testers to whom I;ve been speaking mentioned their Microsoft reps have been telling them Office 14 could still ship by the end of this calendar year, but also might slip into early 2010.Jha mentioned that Microsoft also has been testing Exchange 14 — primarily the Microsoft-hosted Exchange 14 Online release — for the past several months by way of its Exchange Labs program. (The next version of Exchange Online and Exchange Server 14 are based on the same codebase, Jha confirmed,
Office 2007 Keygen, and are being developed in tandem.) Exchange Labs testers are primarily college and university users and administrators.A few things to remember when trying to figure out whether Microsoft will be able to ship Workplace 14 this year (something I still believe they have an opportunity to do): The team has been actively developing Workplace 14 for nearly two years. A private, very select group of external testers seemingly has been working with Microsoft on this for months. (Just as is the case with
Windows 7.)It took Microsoft year from the time it fielded Beta 1 of Office 2007 to release the product to manufacturing. That was in the November 2005 to November 2006 period. Microsoft;s software development processes have tightened up a lot since then….Even if the product ends up christened Office 2010, it still technically could RTM in calendar 2009 I;ve asked Microsoft for more information on the pending Workplace 14 alpha and am waiting to hear back. (Note: Microsoft comment was added to the beginning of this story). Inside the interim, I;ll try to unearth more about the new features that are part of the various Office 14 point products.Are there any next-gen Office features in which you;re specifically interested? What do you hope makes it into the next Office client and server releases?