
"Today at the Worldwide Partner Conference in San Francisco, Microsoft's chief operating officer, Kevin Turner, announced that Windows Server 2008 (previously known as Longhorn), Microsoft SQL Server 2008, and Visual Studio 2008 will be
officially launched on February 27, 2008. This may come as a surprise to those following the Windows 2008 Server news closely, since most sources at Microsoft have been insisting that the next version of its server operating system will released at the very end of 2007. Apparently in Redmond there is a difference between releasing the OS and the extravagant product launches, which are more of a pep rally for the product then a technical presentation."
Member since:
2006-03-12
"Wow. I'm not playing anything, I'm stating facts that 99 out of 100 people accept. Vista was available to businesses first, by quite a few weeks. Its not debatable. Remotely! What is your point again?
The article was about a launch date for Server 2008 ... what are you on about?"
You brought up Vista. I fully accept it was launched to businesses first. I actually use business release date, because it emphasizes how beta Vista is now, so long after launch, and how all the problems have still not been fixed nearly a year later.
I think the only date that matters is *always* the earlier one, because thats when its used. In fact why would I care when its *launched*. I'm interested in when its available.