On mySimon: Samsung 55" LED TV
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Martin LaMonica
Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 25, 2004 11:26:00 PM

Microsoft is expanding a plan to draw mainframe customers to Windows for high-end applications.

Under a program with the internal code name Mission Critical Microsoft, the company is trying to extend its current data center support and sales efforts to a wider range of customers, according to company representative. Microsoft discussed the plan this week at an IBM mainframe user conference in New York.

Mission Critical Microsoft is meant to build off Microsoft's current Datacenter High Availability Program, the support and service offering the company provides to customers with high-end computing needs. The program is designed for Microsoft's Windows server 2003 Datacenter Edition, billed as a competitor to mainframe systems that have very little downtime.

The expanded program will provide a Windows alternative for more of the applications that typically run on mainframes, a company spokeswoman said. Such applications include messaging, enterprise resource planning and customer relationship management programs. She said couldn't provide further details yet.

The company is boosting its efforts to land mainframe customers at a time when Linux--the operating system most threatening to Microsoft's low-end Windows server business--is becoming an increasingly viable competitor on mainframe hardware.

Microsoft rival IBM is actively building out its Linux-on-mainframe business and has signed several multimillion-dollar deals with customers that run Linux publications on mainframe hardware.

For several years, Microsoft has been teaming with hardware partners, including Unisys and Hewlett-Packard, to replicate the same reliability and performance of mainframes on Windows servers based on Intel processors. In June, Microsoft extended a partnership with Fujitsu, pledging to deliver mainframe-like Windows servers based on 64-bit Itanium processors.

Microsoft's Datacenter program is targeted at high volume transaction processing and server consolidation.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 15 Talkback(s)
Oops, thanks
Oops, somehow accessability didn't sound right - thanks for the correction (Read the rest)
Posted by: merlinmurph Posted on: 08/27/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Yes, give an incompetent company even more business.  Xunil_Sierutuf | 08/25/04
Microsoft mainframes??  Jeff Spicoli | 08/25/04
Microsoft Clusters  nucrash | 08/26/04
Kidding?  systemcleaner | 08/26/04
Oxymoron  Plain Logic | 08/25/04
It will fail as usual. This futile pitch is already 5 years old.  systemcleaner | 08/25/04
Only option left for Microsoft.  systemcleaner | 08/25/04
Microsoft is already mission critical...  Mike Cox | 08/25/04
lol  CobraA1 | 08/25/04
That's a joke, right?  merlinmurph | 08/26/04
Reliability, Accessability, and Serviceability  WhoIsDaMan | 08/26/04
Oops, thanks  merlinmurph | 08/27/04
A definite 10  shallow_diver | 08/26/04
Mike takes the gold!  Yagotta B. Kidding | 08/26/04
Broken Record  Roger Ramjet | 08/26/04

What do you think?

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here