Microsoft today sought to encourage more enterprises to adopt virtualisation
technologies by announcing new licensing terms and expanding support for server
applications.
From 1 September the software giant is updating its licensing for 41 server
applications, including Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Enterprise edition, Dynamics
CRM 4.0 and SharePoint Server 2007.
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The new terms will allow firms to assign and reassign licences from one
server to another within a server farm as often as necessary.
This is designed to enable a more flexible and agile IT infrastructure,
according to Microsoft's Neil Sanderson.
"IT is more complex now," he said. "Customers want the flexibility to change
what a physical server is running at short notice and very frequently."
Microsoft also announced that customers would receive technical support for
31 server applications when deploying those apps on Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V,
Microsoft Hyper-V Server or any other third-party validated virtualisation
platform, including VMware.
The vendor is running a series of worldwide
Get
Virtual Now events in its continuing efforts to encourage firms to adopt
virtualisation technology.
"We've talked a lot about where we see virtualisation going and now we've
delivered a core set of technologies and changes to licensing," explained
Sanderson.
"It is time to tell people all the things we've done and encourage them to
use the technology."
The move towards simpler licensing got a welcome repsonse from virtualisation
vendor Parallels.
"Clarification from software vendors on licensing for virtual environments
has been sparse, creating confusion among users. Microsoft is now addressing
this, and though it is currently limited to a selection of applications, it's a
good step forward," said senior vice president Kurt Daniel. "By setting out a
clear position on virtual license mobility, Microsoft is simplifying the
transition and removing one of the major road blocks to virtualisation adoption.
"
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