Microsoft Servers (previously called Windows Server System) is a brand that encompasses a line of Microsoft server products. This includes the server editions of Microsoft Windowsoperating system itself, as well as products targeted at the wider business market. Unlike Microsoft's Dynamics or Office product lines, most of the products sold under this brand are not intended to be line-of-business services in and of themselves.
Windows Storage Server – File server-focused edition of Windows Server, with built-in back-up tools
Microsoft Office server products
Some of the products included in the Windows Server System product branding are designed specifically for interaction with Microsoft Office. These include:
SharePoint Server (MOSS), formerly Microsoft Office SharePoint Portal Server – Intranetportal server facilitating publishing, searching, and sharing of information.
Microsoft System Center is a set of server products aimed specifically at helping corporate IT administrators manage a network of Windows Server and client desktop systems. When first introduced, the "System Center" brand included products from the Windows Server System line, but has since evolved to include new products.
As of May 2007, this line of products includes:
System Center Essentials – Combined features of Operations Manager and Configuration Manager, aimed at small and medium sized businesses
Capacity Planner – Provides purchasing and best-practice capacity planning guidance
Configuration Manager – Configuration management, hardware/software asset management, patch deployment tools for Windows desktops (previously Systems Management Server)
Service Manager – Ties in with SCOM, SCCM for asset tracking as well as incident, problem, change and configuration management (code name Service Desk)
Some technologies that Microsoft has shipped separately from the Windows Server line of operating systems have been incorporated into the operating system itself. These include: