By
Ina Fried
Friday, June 02 2006 11:51 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39362586,00.htm
With the next version of its Exchange server software, Microsoft is adding
in new abilities, such as unified messaging and antivirus tools. But the new
features come at a price.
To get the voice mail integration and other new features in Exchange Server
2007, businesses will have to pay a higher fee for each PC that connects to the
server--a charge known as a client access license, or CAL. For those that want
the core calendar and e-mail software features, without some of the new bells
and whistles, Microsoft will have a standard CAL, priced the same as for the
current Exchange 2003 software.
Microsoft did not say how much customers will pay for the Enterprise CAL,
which covers the new features. However, the software maker did say it will be
less than if companies purchased such tools separately.
The move is part of a growing trend at Microsoft to add high-end ranges to
its product lines. On the desktop side, the company has announced plans for
"Ultimate" editions of Windows Vista and Office 2007. At the same time, its
Windows Server operating system is moving into the supercomputer arena.
One of the big pushes with the new Exchange is a focus on giving businesses
better abilities to protect and track messages, as well as set rules such as who
within a company can talk to one another. These capabilities are important for
regulated industries such as health care and financial services.
Another focus is on allowing businesses to more easily and cost-effectively
store and back up messages, with improved replication features.
"These things let you run very large mailboxes," said Dave Thompson, the
corporate vice president who runs Microsoft's Exchange business. Thompson noted
that internally, Microsoft is increasing its mailbox size limit for workers,
moving from 200MB to a larger 2GB allotment.
The software maker released the first beta of the product, then code-named Exchange 12, in December. A
second beta is planned for this summer, with the company aiming to wrap up
development work by the end of this year. The official goal is the end of 2006
or early 2007, though Chairman Bill Gates said at a hardware conference last
month that Exchange 2007 would be finished this year.
The software is noteworthy for another reason: It's one of the first
Microsoft products to be released in a 64-bit version only, as opposed to
working with both 32-bit servers and 64-bit servers.
Thompson said that Microsoft has been seeing good growth in sales of the
current Exchange 2003 product. The company said it has exceeded its goal of
halving the number of users running Exchange 5.5 and that Exchange now has 48
percent of the market, according to Gartner.
"We still have some customers on 5.5, but the last ones are moving," Thompson
said.