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Windows 2000 Datacenter To Go Beta Next Week

Microsoft Corp. says it will deliver to 300 beta testers next Monday the first public beta of its Windows 2000 Datacenter package.
Written by Mary Jo Foley, Senior Contributing Editor
Microsoft Corp. says it will deliver to 300 beta testers next Monday the first public beta of its Windows 2000 Datacenter package.

Datacenter is the high-end of Microsoft's planned Windows 2000 lineup, with the other SKUs being Professional, Server and Advanced Server. Microsoft has said to expect Datacenter to ship 90 to 120 days after the rest of the Windows 2000 offerings.

While it's a given that Datacenter won't ship until some time next year, it's looking like the commercial shipment of the other Windows 2000 SKUs is unlikely before 2000, either. Microsoft partners say Windows 2000 is running later than expected, and that Microsoft will be lucky to release the other three SKUs to manufacturing before the end of this year. December is the latest internal Microsoft target for the product to go gold, Microsoft partners say.

Microsoft last week announced Release Candidate 2 of Windows 2000 Professional, Server and Advanced Server. The 650,000 Windows 2000 beta testers are expected to begin receiving RC2 disks in the coming week or two.

The Long Road To Delivery

But RC2 is not the final cut of the operating system before it goes gold. Sources close to the company say Microsoft is shooting to deliver a third release candidate to a wide group of testers, and most likely will follow up with an indeterminate number of release candidates that will go to fewer and fewer testers before the product is released to manufacturing. Once the product RTMs, system vendors will put it through more tests before preloading it on new systems.

Microsoft officials have positioned Windows 2000 Datacenter as a product that will be able to handle many of the same chores as mainframe operating systems. Datacenter is slated to include four-node clustering; rolling upgrade support; up to 32-node network load balancing; up to 32-way SMP support.

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