By
Ina Fried
Monday, July 31 2006 11:04 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39378898,00.htm
REDMOND, Wash.--Microsoft said on Friday that it is recalling an update to
its Small Business Server product because of a glitch found late in the
manufacturing process.
The software maker said it found a problem with Windows Small Business Server 2003 R2 after the product was
released to computer makers but before it was made broadly available. Small
Business Server is a product that combines the Windows Server operating system
with the Microsoft Exchange e-mail server and other software. The R2 release is
an update to the version that was finished in 2003.
"Recently, and during a regular audit as part of our software production
process, Microsoft became aware of an issue with the final...software containing
nonfinal versions of a few core components," Microsoft said in a statement
provided to CNET News.com. "Since Microsoft has only just released SBS 2003 R2
to our manufacturing partners (OEMs, system builders and distributors), and it
is not yet generally available to customers, the scope of this concern for
partners and customers is very limited."
Microsoft said it was recalling and would reissue the software, and general
availability of the product would see a "minor delay."
"Our customers and partners are our first priority, and while a short delay
in availability of SBS 2003 R2 is unfortunate, delivering the highest-quality
Small Business Server product to our customers and partners is the right thing
to do," Microsoft said.
One analyst said the fact that a glitch can show up so late in Microsoft's
manufacturing process shows the challenges the software maker faces as its
software becomes ever more complex. That challenge is heightened by the fact
that the company no longer relies on burning all of its products to CDs; it
doesn't have the luxury of taking that time to find bugs.
"This isn't really a stellar advertisement for Microsoft's plan to roll out
more and more complex software through automatic update," Directions on
Microsoft analyst Rob Helm said.
While this glitch affected just a few people, Helm said, a problem with
something going out over Automatic Update could potentially affect millions of
people. Microsoft said earlier this week that it would use the autoupdating
utility to deliver
Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP.