Featured Posts

System Center Orchestrator 2012 overview At Microsoft Teched North America 2011, Adam Hall presented on System Center Orchestrator 2012. System Center Orchestrator is the new name for Opalis, aquired last year -- Microsoft's premier tool for...

Read more

System Center Operations Manager 2012 network monitoring This thursday, at Microsoft Teched North America 2011, Rob Kuehfus and myself will be presenting a breakout session (SIM354) on System Center Operations Manager 2012 network monitoring. Network monitoring...

Read more

SC Operations Manager Connector for VS Team Foundation... Using the System Center Operations Manager 2007 R2 connector for Microsoft Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 (download CTP1 here), operations teams can easily forward application performance...

Read more

Teched NA 2011: Day 1 Keynote Microsoft's premier and flagship IT event, Teched North America 2011, kicked off today with they "day 1 keynote". Around 15 minutes before the keynote started, two DJ's were on stage playing 'Daft Punk...

Read more

Teched NA 2011: Day 0 summary While Teched North America 2011 officially starts tomorrow, day zero or better known as the pre-conference day is done. Several hundreds of people attended these technical one-day workshops which varied...

Read more

System Center Orchestrator 2012 overview

Posted by Maarten Goet | Posted in System Center Orchestrator | Posted on 17-05-2011

0

System Center OrchestratorAt Microsoft Teched North America 2011, Adam Hall presented on System Center Orchestrator 2012. System Center Orchestrator is the new name for Opalis, aquired last year — Microsoft’s premier tool for integration, orchestration and automation. Adam did an overview session, revealing much of the features we can expect in the next few months. He started his talk by announcing that the first beta of System Center Orchestrator 2012 will be available in June.

The System Center Orchestrator Beta marks a significant milestone, indicating a move of the codebase from the Opalis subsidiary to Microsoft System Center. This has many positive benefits, including a removal of the licensing complexity around the ‘grant’ of Opalis, greater alignment to the Microsoft Common Engineering Criteria and also things like the Support Lifecycle. (more)