This week in Seattle, at its first-ever Microsoft Business Intelligence Conference, Microsoft announced the first broad details about the next version of SQL Server, code-named Katmai. Katmai will deliver increased functionality over its predecessor, SQL Server 2005, and help businesses develop applications that span from the desktop to the largest enterprise, Microsoft said.

"We developed SQL Server with the goal of providing a data management and analysis platform for all companies regardless of size or budget," said Microsoft Corporate Vice President Ted Kummert, who oversees the company's Data and Storage Platform Division. "With the release of 'Katmai,' we’ll take the next step on our data platform vision by delivering a comprehensive and integrated business intelligence solution. Expanding the usability of data across businesses will give customers more value for their IT investments."

Although more Katmai details will be provided during a keynote address tomorrow, Microsoft noted today that the next SQL Server version will be scalable, reliable, and a suitable platform for "the most demanding applications." Katmai will include pervasive and powerful business intelligence capabilities, work seamlessly with Microsoft Office 2007 applications and servers, and provide data warehousing facilities. For developers, Katmai will provide device synchronization capabilities and an IDE that integrates with Visual Studio. Broadly, Katmai will work with more than just relational data: Microsoft specifically pointed out the server's document, geographic information, and XML compatibilities.

According to Microsoft, Katmai is due sometime in 2008. I'll provide more information as it arrives.

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Reader Comments

I have to say as a huge fan of SQL 2005 I'm really curious to see the improvements they make with Katmai.

jersey72

Article Rating 3 out of 5

is anybody migrating application-bundled databases from apps that want to install Microsoft SQL Desktop Engine (MSDE) as part of their normal installer? i've installed SQL Server Express ahead of time on my Vista Business notebook for some of those applications (one being Sony Vegas, for it's Media Manager database). the installers usually see the existance of SQL Server [Express] and then just install the database within it instead of loading on MSDE, which is incompatible with Windows Vista. it works wonders for applications that need some form of SQL Server, and doesn't impact system performance any more than MSDE would (which isn't even noticeable in the first place). Windows Vista's performance features really accelerate content searching on the workstation level too.

XP

Waethorn

Article Rating 5 out of 5

Waethorn,

We're developing a .NET 2.0 app that uses SQL Server. The install checks for any version of SQL Server and offers to install SQL Express SP2 if one is not found. Originally the install included MSDE; the ONLY reason we upgraded it was for Vista compatibility.

As a programmer I find the quality of Microsoft's developer tools (VS 2005, SQL Studio, & SSIS) to be going downhill fast, to the point where I've really questioned the sanity of my career choice. Reading the marketing BS from Ted Kummert above does nothing to change my outlook.

Unless Katmai's quality is much higher that SQL 2005, we won't be developing against it or recommending it to our customers.

itpro244

Article Rating 4 out of 5

 
 

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