Maestro, which relies on some of the innards of SharePoint and SQL Server, is going to a just over a dozen beta testers now, said Chris Caren, general manager of Business Applications within Microsoft's Information Worker Business Unit. A full beta release is slated for this summer with final shipment due in the fourth quarter. Pricing has yet to be determined.
The goal is to provide realtime monitoring of back-office system metrics, as well as a window into the more historical data found in data warehouses, Caren told CRN on Monday.
The software requires the use of either SQL Server 2000 or upcoming SQL Server 2005 and integrates with their reporting and notification services. It also relies on Windows Server 2003's integral SharePoint services. If the user also has the full SharePoint Portal Server 2003 additional functions will "light up", a spokeswoman said.
"With Portal Server, you also can get the full 'My Sites' personalization and enterprise scaling," she said. That would enable creation of fully personalized "dashboards" to backend metrics and data.
In like fashion, while Maestro will likely run with older versions of Office—-some details are still pending—-the use of the latest Office 2003 version will enable additional functions.
Maestro's goal is to link to a variety of back-office applications and data, although Microsoft estimates that 80 percent of the metrics its customers want to tap are now in SQL Server. Access to SAP apps can be accomplished with the SAP .Net connector. Other data repositories can be accessed via ODBC connectors or an array of standard Web Services that Maestro supports.
VARs and integrators can use Maestro, along with SQL Server and Visual Studio to build their own realtime links to line-of-business applications of all types, Microsoft said.
