Microsoft is working with HPE, Dell, and Lenovo on
co-engineering Azure Stack to run on their servers when the new platform
launches next year, officials said on July 12 during Microsoft's Worldwide
Partner Conference.
Azure
Stack is a stack of technologies Microsoft is designing for customers and
partners to run in their own datacenters. Azure Stack includes
"experiences" and programming interfaces that Microsoft offers via
its own Azure public cloud.
Until now, the plan of record was Microsoft would allow
customers and partners on hardware of their choice. But in order to reduce
complexity and improve the odds of Azure Stack working well, Microsoft decided
to deliver the product next year as a turnkey bundle.
While
some customers and partners involved in the first technical preview of
Azure Stack did get it working on their own hardware, Microsoft officials
said they believe following the appliance model used with Microsoft's
Cloud Platform System (CPS) will yield better results.
A
second technical preview of Azure Stack is coming sometime later this calendar
year. And over time, Microsoft plans to add support for more server
configurations from more vendors for Azure Stack, executives said.
Those
using Microsoft's Cloud Platform System can consider CPS a stepping stone to
Azure Stack. Customers running CPS and Windows Azure Pack will be able to use
these systems alongside Azure Stack ones; they won't need to try to upgrade CPS
systems to Azure Stack -- another piece of new guidance from Microsoft on
Tuesday.
Microsoftofficials also said Windows Server 2016 and System Center 2016 will launch
at the company's Ignite conference in late September. Previously,
Microsoft execs had said Windows Server 2016 would launch in the third calendar
quarter of 2016, most likely in the fall.
A
wording clarification: "Launch" does not mean release to
manufacturing (which will likely occur earlier than late September, and
possibly around the time that Windows 10 Anniversary Update is designated as
complete.) "Launch" is also not the same as general availability.
Microsoft will likely make Windows Server 2016 and System Center 2016 generally
available once the products are on the latest price lists, which typically
means the start of a new month -- so perhaps October 1
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