Microsoft this week revealed that it has extended the mainstream
support for Windows Server 2008 by an additional 18 months, from its
original expiration on July 9, 2013 to January 15, 2015. However,
unlike with Windows XP and its many support extensions, this change was
required by Microsoft’s support lifecycle policies.
Microsoft revealed the change in its Support Lifecycle Lifeline newsletter. The news was first reported by my Windows Weekly cohost Mary Jo Foley.
“The Microsoft policy provides a minimum of five years of Mainstream
Support or two years of Mainstream Support after the successor product
ships, whichever is longer,” the newsletter explains. “Windows Server
2008 was originally scheduled to transition to Extended Support on July
9, 2013. Modifications to the expiration dates for Windows Server 2008
are a result of the launch of Windows Server 2012, giving customers the additional 2 years of support.”
In other words, because Server 2012 shipped this month, mainstream
support for its predecessor, Server 2008, had to be extended to at
least September 2014, which is beyond the originally scheduled July
2013 date, which (roughly) marks the five-year anniversary of the
initial release of that product. I’m not clear on how they arrived at
January 2015 (as opposed to September 2014).
If you’re wondering why Server 2008 R2 isn’t considered “the
successor product” for Server 2008, Microsoft has consistently referred
to its R2 products as optional, with the R2 bits essentially being
delivered separately from the core Server version. So, in many ways,
Server 2008 R2 is simply Server 2008 with some optional and additional
features provided as add-ons.
Meanwhile, Windows XP, which has seen several support extensions, is
finally moving toward its expiration date of April 8, 2014. When this
milestone is reached, XP will have been supported for about 12 years,
which seems like eons. But Microsoft’s support lifecycle policy now
provides 10 years of support for business products (five years of
mainstream support plus five years of extended support), with some
period of “self-help” online support after that. And even Microsoft’s
consumer and hardware products are supported for five or more years.