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Gates expands on Microsoft's IT management vision

Gates expands on Microsoft's IT management vision

By:  Joris Evers  On: 15 Nov 2004 For: IDG News Service Creator

In one of his first public presentations on the issue, Gates is slated to expand on what has thus far been an abstract vision of software and hardware with built-in manageability.

Microsoft Corp. is set to provide more details on Tuesday of its vision to simplify IT management and to announce the first public beta of its Windows Update Services (WUS) patch management product.

WUS is a free Windows Server add-on that allows users to download and deploy patches for a host of Microsoft products. A technical preview was released early this year. The WUS predecessor, Software Update Services (SUS) 1.0, only handles patches for Windows clients.

While speaking to an audience of IT professionals at Microsoft's IT Forum event in Copenhagen, Microsoft chairman and chief software architect Bill Gates also plans on Tuesday update attendees on the company's ambitious Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), a plan to reduce IT complexity by improving manageability.

In one of his first public presentations about DSI, Gates is slated to expand on what has thus far been an abstract vision of software and hardware with built-in manageability. He is expected to define three technical pillars of DSI: models, knowledge and life cycle, said David Hamilton, director of Microsoft's Windows and Enterprise Management division.

Microsoft is not ready to delve further into the knowledge and life cycle concepts, but Gates is scheduled to talk in more detail about models and provide a road map and vision for the next three to five years of development of models, Hamilton said.

Gates will specify health, configuration, and tasks as three distinct types of data models that management software will receive from applications or hardware. Together, these models make up the System Definition Model (SDM), a scheme that uses XML (Extensible Markup Language) to describe attributes of hardware and software in an IT environment.

DSI promises plug-and-play manageability. For example, an Exchange Server brought online in a network would automatically inform the management software of its status, configuration, and tasks.

Visual Studio 2005, due out in the first half of 2005, will give developers early capability to experiment with SDM, Hamilton said. The next Visual Studio, code-named "Orcas" and expected in 2006, will offer expanded DSI capabilities, he said.

In a demonstration during Gates' presentation, Microsoft plans to show how the health and task information provided by server software and used by a capacity planning tool code-named Indy can help an organization merge two IT environments, Hamilton said.

Microsoft demonstrated Indy for the first time at its management conference in March. The product is slated to be delivered at a yet unspecified date with the second version of System Center, a management tool that will combine Systems Management Server (SMS), Microsoft Operations Manager (MOM), a data warehousing capability along with Indy and a tool to create and maintain a desired state of a server. The first version of System Center is due next year.


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Joris Evers Joris Evers is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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