Microsoft Plans Office 2003 Service Pack For May

Microsoft is putting pedal to the metal to get Service Pack 1 for Office 2003 out by May, sources said. The current schedule is to prep a release candidate by April and final, or "Release To Web," code by late May.

This release is critical because many corporate accounts hold off on upgrading to new software versions until the first service pack is available.

The plan now is for SP 1 to include not only the hot fixes and patches that typically flow after the retail release of a product, but also fairly major new features for both InfoPath and OneNote, the sources said. The inclusion of those as-yet-unknown features are what makes the push for SP1 seem somewhat hurried to Microsoft insiders.

"Six to nine months after ship is pretty typical for SP1, but that's only for patches and fixes. When you're also adding features, that makes the timeframe rushed," said one source close to the company.

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InfoPath is the application that enables a user's desktop applications -- Word, Excel, etc. -- to tap into back-end data via XML links. OneNote is a note-taking application that eliminates the need for keyboard entry.

Office 2003 hit the retail shelves in late October, although volume buyers could get it a month earlier.

The release also will include fixes and security bolstering as part of the company's continued security push, code-named Springboard, the sources said.

"This is a date-driven release," an insider confirmed. Some pointed out that the rush to finalize code appears to run counter to the company's push to build in quality and security up front and not ship products until they are solid.

Officially, Microsoft is circumspect on the subject. The service pack "is still in the early development stages, so anything we say about it would only be speculation right now, as a lot can change during the development process," said Dan Leach, lead product manager of the Information Worker Product Management Group, through a spokeswoman. "One thing we can say is that, thanks to new technologies like Watson, and feedback from over 600,000 beta testers, the newly launched Office System represents the most stable, reliable and secure version of Office Microsoft has ever produced."

Microsoft has acknowledged that Watson and new tools including Service Quality Monitor (SQM) are key in the development of the Longhorn Office release, also known as Office 12.