News
SMS Conference Attendees Get Glimpse of Topaz
- By Scott Bekker
- 03/06/2001
Microsoft Corp. publicly demonstrated several features of
the next version of Systems Management Server, code-named Topaz, for the first
time Tuesday at an SMS user conference in Las Vegas.
The next version of Microsoft’s
enterprise system inventory, configuration and software deployment tool will
include enhanced remote user support, tighter Active Directory integration, and
improved software usage metering and reporting. The public beta is scheduled
for the second half of 2001.
“We’re doing a substantial piece of work in Topaz to provide
a much better experience in remote user settings,” David Hamilton, director of
Microsoft’s management technologies group, told ENT in an interview after his
keynote Tuesday.
The improvements come at the request of customers who were
satisfied with SMS’ management of constantly connected clients, but ran into
problems with mobile sales employees’ laptops, WAN clients and occasionally connected
users, Hamilton said.
While SMS 2.0, the current version of the product, can be
used in Windows 2000 deployments, it does not take advantage of many of the
capabilities of Microsoft’s Active Directory. Microsoft aims to fix that in
Topaz.
“In no way is Topaz dependant on the Active Directory. But
when Active Directory is there, when people have invested the time and effort
to deploy Active Directory, SMS should be better,” Hamilton says.
One of the most important Active Directory-focused
enhancements of Topaz is making it easier to target sites or Organizational
Units. SMS is currently an inventory-centric tool – it is designed to
distribute software to clients that match a certain profile such as sufficient
RAM or CPU.
Microsoft is also tuning software metering, which allows an
administrator to monitor the applications that are running at a given time
across a network. With Topaz, Microsoft is re-engineering the metering
technology it introduced in SMS 2.0.
“We put a lot of bells and whistles in 2.0,” Hamilton says.
Topaz scales back on metering a little. “We specifically looked at the common
things [customers] do day to day,” he says.
Microsoft is also scrapping the old SMS reporting system for
a new one that adds browser-based reporting and provides a broader range of
reporting capabilities.
The graveyard of clients once supported in SMS but since
discontinued includes 16-bit Windows, Macintosh and OS/2. Windows 95 may be the
next casualty.
“We’re talking to a lot of customers about Windows 95,”
Hamilton says. “We don’t make those decisions for certain until beta.”
SMS 2.0 was just updated last month with the release of
Service Pack 3, which is not a required upgrade. SP2, released over the summer,
was a required upgrade and was slipstreamed into new copies of SMS 2.0. – Scott Bekker
About the Author
Scott Bekker is editor in chief of Redmond Channel Partner magazine.