No quick fix for Windows Home Server bug

Back in December, Microsoft dutifully notified the (few) people using its Windows Home Server software that a bug in the product could corrupt files.

Typically, when Microsoft posts a bulletin outlining specific problems in its products, as it did in this case, a fix is usually right around the corner.

Not so for Windows Home Server. According to a bulletin posted this week, the bug will not be fixed until June, when the company posts a patch. That means, in essence, Windows Home Server will be on the market for a year before the fix comes.

When certain programs such as Vista Photo Gallery, Microsoft Outlook, and Intuit QuickBooks are used to edit or transfer files that are stored on a server running Windows Home Server that has more than one hard drive, the files may become corrupted, Microsoft said.

Granted, the problem should affect only a small number of the few servers actually running the software. In January, Microsoft’s Steven VanRoekel told CNET News.com’s Ina Fried that the product’s sales have exceeded the company’s expectations, though he declined to give specific numbers.

“It’s definitely tens of thousands,” VanRoekel said at the time.

A post in the Windows Home Server team blog indicates that the problem has been found and acknowledges the tardy response, but doesn’t really explain the delay:

From the outside looking in, some people would say “Why is this taking so long?” Fixing this issue is the Windows Home Server team’s top priority and the team is making good progress on the fix. We understand the issue really well at this point–it is at an extremely low level of the operating system and it requires thorough testing to ensure that the fix addresses the issue. We have coded a part of the fix which is currently being tested internally. Internal testing is expected to continue for at least several more weeks.

As ZDNet blogger Adrian Kingsley-Hughes notes, that response will do little to boost confidence in–or sales of–the product:

…a patch needs thorough testing, but there’s no excuse for releasing a file server OS containing such a critical flaw, and there’s no excuse for a fix to take so long, leaving users in the lurch in the interim.

Microsoft and market analysts have noted that Windows Home Server will remain a tough sell for some time to come. The product is targeted at consumers as a way to simplify accessing music, video, and digital photos from any home PC.

Few people, outside of Bill Gates and some optimistic analysts, expect more than token sales for at least a few years. One problem: few consumers really understand what a server is, much less why they would need one in their home.

Out-of-the-box data corruption and a tardy fix for the problem will all but guarantee niche status.

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Microsoft has High Hopes for Windows Server 2008

Microsoft’s expectations are running high for the upcoming release of Windows Server 2008. Steve Ballmer, the company’s CEO, will officially launch the server software at an event in Los Angeles on Wednesday, capping months of beta testing by customers around the world.

The launch is vitally important to Microsoft, which hopes sales of the updated server software will spur wider adoption of Windows Vista by corporate customers that have so far resisted the urge to upgrade from Windows XP.

“We think with Vista SP1 and Windows Server 2008, the integrated benefits that customers see will really encourage them to start looking at deployments of Vista on the desktop as well,” said Jagan Narendran, the director of Microsoft Asia-Pacific’s Infrastructure Server Business. Read more »

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Yahoo board talks but makes no decision on Microsoft

One week after Microsoft publicly bid to acquire Yahoo, the takeover target’s directors held a conference call and still haven’t decided what to do, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The Yahoo directors discussed outsourcing their search advertising to Google, as well as how to negotiate a higher offer from Microsoft, unidentified sources told the newspaper.

The bid, valued at $44.6 billion when Microsoft made the offer a week ago, has dropped to about $41.8 billion as Microsoft’s share price has fallen.

Meanwhile, no other suitors have stepped up, except for the outsourcing pact Google reportedly approached Yahoo with in an effort to thwart Microsoft’s bid.

Yahoo’s board is scheduled to meet on Wednesday, and planned job cuts are expected on Tuesday, sources told CNET News.com.

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