Hi, Manlio Vecchiet here. I'm director of product management on the Windows Server marketing team, focused on Windows Server networking, terminal services and VDI. I'm in Barcelona right now attending Microsoft TechEd EMEA conference.

Whether you are one of the many IT Pros that have successfully deployed Terminal Services over the past decade, or whether your company is considering virtualization technologies to implement a virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), or even if you are new to the concept of a centralized, remote desktop - this will matter to you.

Today we are introducing Windows Server 2008 Remote Desktop Services – the next generation of server tools and platform that allow you to accelerate and extend centralized desktop and application deployments to any device. So, what exactly is ‘Remote Desktop Services’?

Remote Desktop Services (RDS) is the new name for Terminal Services, and reflects the expanded role in Windows Server 2008 R2 so that you can run the desktop or applications in the datacenter while your users can be anywhere. RDS enables a full-fidelity desktop or application experience and efficiently connects remote workers from managed or unmanaged devices.  RDS helps keep critical intellectual property secure and simplify regulatory compliance by moving applications and data from the user’s access device to the data center.

The key here is that RDS in Windows Server 2008 R2 makes the new server OS the ideal platform for companies to implement a centralized desktop strategy and for partners to provide additional innovation. It introduces the new Remote Desktop Connection Broker – an expansion of the Session Broker in Windows Server 2008 – which provides the administrator with a unified experience for setting up user access to both virtualized desktops (running as a full Windows client OS on top of Microsoft’s virtualization infrastructure) and traditional session-based remote desktops. Together with Hyper-V and System Center Virtual Machine Manager, the Remote Desktop Connection Broker enables a VDI solution for low-complexity, departmental environments, and a platform for partners who are delivering rich, extensible solutions where heterogeneous client support is a prerequisite, and when enhanced management and scalability is a requirement. The Remote Desktop Connection Broker it complements other, shared RDS infrastructure components in Windows Server 2008, such as Remote Desktop Web Access or Remote Desktop Gateway. With the Remote Desktop Connection Broker, partners will find an extensive set of APIs that will allow them to continue innovation and deliver added value to customers.

 

Other important improvements in our virtualization platform in Windows Server 20080 R2, such as Live Migration, will further contribute to making Windows Server 2008 R2 an excellent platform for VDI, improving both availability and scalability of a virtual desktop deployment.

 

Finally, Windows Server 2008 R2 also introduces a series of platform enhancements for remote desktop users – such as support for multiple physical monitors, redirection of multimedia and 3D content, including Vista Aero, and enhanced, bi-directional audio support.

 

I hope you are as excited as I am about this. Post some questions in the comments section - I'm interested to hear what you think and to answer questions.

 

Manlio

Posted by WindowsServer, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 30, 2008, 5:15 pm | No Comments »

If you have seen Chuck Todd of MSNBC and his Surface applications for predicting the US Presidential Elections, we now bring that capability to every desktop! Download it here and run it to make your own predictions and compare it with the official ones.

Posted by TechNet Announcements for Week of 9/28/2009, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 30, 2008, 1:50 pm | No Comments »

Our new Social Bookmarking application gives you a place to save and tag your favorite online resources, and see what the experts are bookmarking.

Posted by TechNet Announcements for Week of 9/28/2009, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 30, 2008, 1:50 pm | No Comments »

The Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC), November 5-7, will provide deep technical knowledge about Windows 7 to help you build great hardware products that take advantage of the next Windows platform.

Posted by TechNet Announcements for Week of 9/28/2009, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 30, 2008, 1:49 pm | No Comments »

Using Exchange management features in PowerShell: Learn how to combine the PowerShell skills you?ve learn in the previous sessions to manage Exchange 2007. Build reports, view event logs and manage your server?s health using PowerShell.

Posted by TechNet How-to Videos, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 29, 2008, 12:40 pm | No Comments »

In this video, Marc Hoppers explains how to use the Exchange Administration features provided in Microsoft Online Services. Topics include, adding and editing users, creating distribution lists, setting ups safe senders and blocked senders.

Posted by TechNet How-to Videos, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 28, 2008, 4:19 pm | No Comments »

In this video Nicholas Blank shows us the flexibility of using variables in PowerShell

Posted by TechNet How-to Videos, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 28, 2008, 4:18 pm | No Comments »

In this video, Marc Hoppers explains how to configure a SharePoint site collection using Microsoft Online Services. Topics include how to provision a new site collection, how to allocate space to the site collection, and how to add users to the site collection.

Posted by TechNet How-to Videos, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 28, 2008, 4:18 pm | No Comments »

Windows Server 2008 R2 showed its pretty face at the Professional Developers Conference today, here in Los Angeles. Hi there, my name’s Oliver Rist and I’m a new technical product manager on the Windows Server team. I’m down here in La-La Land heaving great sighs of satisfaction as we unveil the first sneak peeks of pre-beta Windows Server 2008 R2. Though this release is right in line with our announced roadmap strategy for future Server releases, there are several items of note with R2:

First and foremost, 32-bit is done. History. Archives. Windows Server 2008 R2 is the first Windows OS platform to go 64-bit only, and frankly it was high time. Customers have been unable to purchase a 32-bit server CPU for over two years now, and the advancements in CPU architectures really dictated that we squeeze as much performance out of customers’ hardware purchases as possible. The move to 64-bit is a first step.

You’ll also find that we’ve aligned R2 development around four core technology pillars:

First, there’s virtualization. R2 represents our most pervasive move into virtualization yet, including R2’s undisputed marquee feature, Live Migration. Think physical host migrations of running VMs happening in milliseconds—no service or user connection interruptions. With Live Migration, data centers can truly go virtual and largely divorce management considerations between software and hardware, and all managed from inside a single OS frame.

R2’s virtualization also extends to a new Hyper-V for Windows Server 2008 R2 (think mucho better management, beefier resources for VMs and more). And potentially more exciting, Terminal Services is updating its remote applications feature to include a true Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI). Think desktops and applications wrapped in virtualized packages, managed centrally and deployed to Windows 7 desktop with such tight integration most users will be unable to tell the difference between centrally hosted apps and those installed locally. (And don’t worry, a Web Access feature will let Windows XP and Windows Vista users in on the fun, too.)

Our second area of core concentration is streamlined management. R2 contains a host of new server role-specific management UIs. Even better, these are all built on PowerShell 2.0, which hosts a bunch of improvements of its own. For one, you’ll find over 240 new cmdlets inside the R2 box with more coming from other Microsoft platform products. There’s also a new Graphical PowerShell UI that adds developer-oriented features so you can more easily create your own cmdlets, including syntax coloring and better debugging tools. Add to that a new Active Directory Domain Services management console, enhanced Group Policy functions and a remote-capable Server Manager, and IT administrators have a lot to look forward to with R2.

Our Web concentration largely represents updates to IIS 7.0. The Web server is better than ever with new PowerShell management support, bennies gained from new failover clustering updates, and a number of popular IIS Extensions that have been rolled up into this release, including WebDAV and an updated Administration Pack to name just two. New reporting capabilities, better deployment options and more flexible deployment options with support for technologies like SilverLight and PHP—it’s a brave new IIS world in R2.

Last and definitely my favorite is the enterprise workloads pillar. Yes, this covers the heavy-iron features I love so much, like failover clustering, new reliability features and updates to enterprise storage (more iSCSI enhancements, management and more). But it also covers the end-to-end network experience for enterprise users—and that means a very cool Better Together story with Windows 7. Live Migration is getting a lot of spotlight attention, but I think DirectAccess is might be the sleeper feature of R2 and Windows 7. With DA, remote computing essentially becomes invisible for end-users. Using technologies like SSTP and IPv6 combined with way-easy management UIs in Windows Server 2008 R2, admins can build remote computing policies that let users plug into any network, anywhere and see their local network resources—completely secure, no clunky VPN required. As long as there’s an outward network connection, DA takes care of everything in the background and automatically. Awesome. And that’s just one R2-Windows 7 synergy out of many.

I’ll be updating this blog regularly from now on with a deeper dive into R2’s load of new features and its capabilities with the new client. Meanwhile, visit www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008r2 for more details as well as the Reviewers Guide I’ve been putting together for the last several weeks. We’ll be adding a lot of new content over the next several months so keep checking back.

Oliver Rist

Posted by WindowsServer, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 28, 2008, 10:52 am | No Comments »

The Platform Solution Blueprints series serves as the foundation for the other webcasts and podcasts.  If you are taking a "best-of-breed" approach to your IT strategy, don't miss the information presented in this introduction. 

Posted by TechNet Announcements for Week of 9/28/2009, filed under Uncategorized. Date: October 27, 2008, 2:54 pm | No Comments »

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