News

VS2010 ALM Acquires Teamprise Clients

As the world celebrates the 20th anniversary of the "fall of the wall," Microsoft announced today in Berlin that it has acquired the Teamprise Client Suite, which supports Eclipse and other cross-platform environments for Team Foundation Server.

The announcement was made during the Developer Session keynote by Jason Zander, general manager of Visual Studio for Microsoft's Developer Division, on the first day of Tech Ed Europe 2009, Nov. 9 – 13.

The Teamprise Client Suite consists of an Eclipse plug-in, a standalone explorer client (outside of the IDE) that provides similar functionality and a command-line client for scripting. According to Microsoft, the technology enables source control, work-item tracking, build and reporting by integrating the Team Provider menu into Eclipse 3.0 and higher, and popular Eclipse-based IDEs--Adobe Flex Builder, BEA Workshop, JBoss and Rational Application Developer. The Teamprise explorer and command-line clients work on Windows, Mac OS X and Unix (Linux and Solaris).

"This is a brilliant move by Microsoft," says Al Hilwa, program director, Application Development Software for IDC. It enables cross-pollination in companies that have Java and .NET environments or ALM standardization in enterprises that want to adopt Microsoft's Visual Studio Team System.

"In a way you are seeing .NET maturing in the enterprise," he says, with more professionalized development and serious testing around it. "This is a milestone in maturation."

It is also important, according to Hilwa, "because Microsoft has been cranking most of its revenue in the team space." According to IDC estimates, Microsoft's application development (Visual Studio, ALM, SCM) and IT portfolio management software (Microsoft Project) represented a $1.271 billion business in the 2008 calendar year. Enterprise sales are the primary driver.

Brian Harry, Microsoft technical fellow and TFS product unit manager for TFS, explained in his blog today how Teamprise will fit into the Visual Studio ALM offerings going forward:

"With the transaction complete, we are turning our attention to creating the first “official” Microsoft version of the Teamprise Client Suite (new brand TBD). We expect to release an update this coming spring that will support a large portion of the TFS 2010 feature set while still being compatible with TFS 2005 and 2008 servers. When the Microsoft branded release is available, we will be providing free upgrades for all customers who own a Teamprise client product and an associated TFS CAL and will begin full Microsoft support for the product."

Teamprise will be included In Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate with MSDN, the successor to Visual Studio 2008 Team System Team Suite. It will also be sold for $799 (U.S.), separately.

The Teamprise technology was purchased from the Teamprise division of SourceGear, the company that develops SourceOffSite for Microsoft Visual SourceSafe. Teamprise v3.3 will continue to be sold and supported by the Teamprise division of SourceGear until the first Microsoft version is released. The Microsoft-branded product is expected in the same timeframe as the planned VS2010 launch, which is scheduled for March 22, 2010.

Microsoft has worked closely with the Teamprise developers since TFS originated in 2002, according to Harry. Most of the Teamprise development team has been hired by Microsoft. Former Teamprise lead architect and the Team System MVP of 2009, Martin Woodward, is the Microsoft program manager for Teamprise. Woodward will continue to work out of Northern Ireland.

About the Author

Kathleen Richards is the editor of RedDevNews.com and executive editor of Visual Studio Magazine.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Hands On: New VS Code Insiders Build Creates Web Page from Image in Seconds

    New Vision support with GitHub Copilot in the latest Visual Studio Code Insiders build takes a user-supplied mockup image and creates a web page from it in seconds, handling all the HTML and CSS.

  • Naive Bayes Regression Using C#

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the naive Bayes regression technique, where the goal is to predict a single numeric value. Compared to other machine learning regression techniques, naive Bayes regression is usually less accurate, but is simple, easy to implement and customize, works on both large and small datasets, is highly interpretable, and doesn't require tuning any hyperparameters.

  • VS Code Copilot Previews New GPT-4o AI Code Completion Model

    The 4o upgrade includes additional training on more than 275,000 high-quality public repositories in over 30 popular programming languages, said Microsoft-owned GitHub, which created the original "AI pair programmer" years ago.

  • Microsoft's Rust Embrace Continues with Azure SDK Beta

    "Rust's strong type system and ownership model help prevent common programming errors such as null pointer dereferencing and buffer overflows, leading to more secure and stable code."

  • Xcode IDE from Microsoft Archrival Apple Gets Copilot AI

    Just after expanding the reach of its Copilot AI coding assistant to the open-source Eclipse IDE, Microsoft showcased how it's going even further, providing details about a preview version for the Xcode IDE from archrival Apple.

Subscribe on YouTube

Upcoming Training Events