Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Microsoft Drops Commerce Server

I'm not surprised, Microsoft has ignored it for quite some time. [Link]
It’s been a while since Microsoft officials have said anything about the company’s Commerce Server product. It’s not because no one has asked. A few of my roadmap-loving readers have asked me what’s going on with Commerce Server — Microsoft’s e-commerce server with hooks into SharePoint and BizTalk. In turn, I’ve asked Microsoft repeatedly over the past few months. The answer, each time, was that the company had nothing more to share at this time (beyond this statement) about Commerce Server futures.
Among my questions: Will there be another release after Commerce Server 2009 R2, which Microsoft seemingly released in September 2011?  (I say “seemingly” because there doesn’t seem to have been any official Microsoft announcement.) Will Microsoft be giving Commerce Server the cloud treatment, since company brass have said Microsoft plans to deliver cloud-hosted versions of all of the company’s products, going forward? Or does the Online Service Delivery Platform (OSDP) that Microsoft is building to support its Office 365 bundle — one element of which is a shared commerce infrastructure — count (in Softies’ minds) as the “cloudy” version of Commerce Server?
Happily, one trusted source, a long-time Commerce Server collaborator, recently came forward offering to fill the Commerce Server information void.
My contact said that Microsoft officials decided Commerce Server didn’t really fit into the company’s “all cloud” roadmap and has decided to offload the product. He said Microsoft has come to an agreement with Ascentium — a Bellevue, Wash.-based digital agency that recently bought Cactus Commerce — via which Commerce Server will be now a fully Ascentium-owned Product.
The tipster said that the last Microsoft-owned Commerce Server SKU will be Commerce Server 2009 R2, which Microsoft will support until 2014. The official announcement on all this will happen before the end of calendar 2011, my contact said.
Unsurprisingly, Microsoft officials again denied comment when I asked. The Ascentium folks referred me to Cactus Commerce for comment, but so far, there’s been no response from that company, either.
If and when Microsoft does pass the Commerce Server baton to Ascentium/Cactus, it won’t be too surprising.
According to the Cactus Web site, Cactus is a leading Microsoft Commerce Server partner and has been working hand-in-hand with Microsoft on BizTalk Server and Commerce Server since 2000. In 2007, Cactus began “to strategically collaborate with the Commerce Server Product Unit, bringing product innovation and subject matter expertise in e-commerce and digital marketing to the partnership,” according to the Cactus site. And Cactus Executive Vice President Ryan Donovan, a former Microsoft Product Unit Manager in Developer Division and former lealder in the Microsoft Commerce Server business unit, helped establish the joint Microsoft-Cactus partnership.
And from Ascentium. [Link]
Microsoft will be transitioning future product development of Commerce Server, to its partner Ascentium. Microsoft will continue to honor mainstream and extended support of Commerce Server 2009 through 2014 and 2019, respectively. Microsoft will not release future versions of Commerce Server, but Commerce Server 2009 R2 will continue to be part of Microsoft’s official price list until July 2012; Ascentium will take responsibility for future versions of the Commerce Server product. Both companies are working closely together to facilitate a smooth transition plan with customers. Stay tuned for details.

1 comment:

Gregory Santovian said...

In response to:

"If and when Microsoft does pass the Commerce Server baton to Ascentium/Cactus, it won’t be too surprising."

The baton in truth was passed a long time ago. When the Cactus joint development/marketing partnership was first formed a few years back, development largely shifted to Ottawa. In truth development was already outsourced to Cactus and not much has really been run through Redmond for a long while. I would not expect much from Ascentium as its just going to be the same development team and same IT executives running the show. The product really needs a MAJOR refactoring from its old COM layer, its old database layer on up. The Marketing capabilities of the product border on the arcane and its capabilities of its so called flexible profile system is quite terrible, just ask any DBA.

There are too many solutions coming out that are ASP.NET based and cloud based and which have both on premise and cloud options. They might not have a big Microsoft name attached to them, but in my opinion, all that has caused is a lack of innovation.

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