A Hitchhiker's Guide to Visual Studio 2008, Part I
When you download and install Visual Studio 2008 Beta 2, you may notice that some of the product names have changed for this release. On the Help menu in Team Suite, click About and you'll find that many of the products in Team System have a new name.
Since we released Visual Studio 2005, we’ve heard from you that the capabilities of each of the team editions don’t always map to the way you define roles in your organizations. To simplify the naming and respond to this feedback, we’ve renamed the team editions to remove specific role names. Of course, this doesn’t mean we’re changing Team System’s charter – it’s still designed to help everyone on the team collaborate together through integrated tools, processes, and guidance.
Below is a list of the name changes compared to what they were in Visual Studio 2005.
Visual Studio 2005 | Visual Studio 2008 |
Visual Studio Team System | Visual Studio Team System 2008 |
Visual Studio 2005 Team Suite | Visual Studio Team System 2008 Team Suite |
Visual Studio 2005 Team Edition for Software Architects | Visual Studio Team System 2008 Architecture Edition |
Visual Studio 2005 Team Edition for Software Developers | Visual Studio Team System 2008 Development Edition |
Visual Studio 2005 Team Edition for Software Testers | Visual Studio Team System 2008 Test Edition |
Visual Studio 2005 Team Edition for Database Professionals | Visual Studio Team System 2008 Database Edition |
Visual Studio 2005 Team Foundation Server | Visual Studio Team System 2008 Team Foundation Server |
Visual Studio 2005 Team Test Load Agent | Visual Studio Team System 2008 Test Load Agent |
However, the names for the rest of the Visual Studio product line are unchanged except for the version change.
Visual Studio 2005 | Visual Studio 2008 |
Visual C# 2005 Express Edition | Visual C# 2008 Express Edition |
Visual C++ 2005 Express Edition | Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition |
Visual Basic 2005 Express Edition | Visual Basic 2008 Express Edition |
Visual Web Developer 2005 Express Edition | Visual Web Developer 2008 Express Edition |
Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition | Visual Studio 2008 Standard Edition |
Visual Studio 2005 Professional Edition | Visual Studio 2008 Professional Edition |
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Comments
Anonymous
July 26, 2007
Check out Rob's blog announcing the new branding for Team System 2008 . In it, he writes: Since we releasedAnonymous
July 26, 2007
I still wish the individual SKUs would be destroyed and then we'd have Visual Studio 2008 Professional and Team. I have yet to see how disabling certain features actually works on smaller teams -- everyone ends up getting Team Suite anyways, at the cost of lots of confusion about the lesser versions.Anonymous
July 26, 2007
My colleague, Rob Caron , just posted the latest news on upcoming name changes for some of the VisualAnonymous
July 26, 2007
And where can we find the link to download vs2008 beta 2? Rob says: See Visual Studio 2008 Beta 2 is Served. Come and Get it!Anonymous
July 26, 2007
"we’ve heard from you that the capabilities of each of the team editions don’t always map to the way you define roles in your organizations" And as a response you change the names?!? The NAMES aren't the problem...Anonymous
July 26, 2007
I don't see how renaming them changes the fundamental problem. Do developers not need to test? Are database devs not interested in architecture (or testing?) Unless you have a big, highly silo'd team, you have to buy team suite anyway. Or you just buy the Dev version and do without data dude and use nunit and test driven or resharper for testing. The architect suff isn't fully baked in 2005. It might be better in 2008 and worth paying for. You need to think about horizontal integration and creating horizontal layers - which has always been the successful pattern for MSDN - rather than vertical silos.Anonymous
July 26, 2007
VSTS 2008 and other newsAnonymous
July 26, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
July 26, 2007
VS 2008 here I come!!!!! First the Database Professionals team gets SR1 out the door. Now DevDiv at MicrosoftAnonymous
July 26, 2007
PingBack from http://www.universityupdate.com/Technology/Visual-Basic/4144025.aspxAnonymous
July 27, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
July 27, 2007
Why not drop the word System from the Team SKUs. It's pretty darn meaningless.Anonymous
July 27, 2007
Visual Studio 2008 Beta 2, Silverlight, Rosario, and more!Anonymous
July 28, 2007
> Visual Studio Team Team Foundation Server 2008 Shouldn't this be.. Visual Studio Team System Foundation Server 2008? Man, that would be nice...Anonymous
August 02, 2007
While I appreciate renaming the products to better describe their role....I think the whole package needs to be re-evaluated. Too many sku's too much confusion. Visual Studio 2008 Profession and Team would be fine....I still don't know what the difference is between Visual Studio Team System 2008 and Visual Studio Team System 2008 Team Foundation Server and does Visual Studio Team System 2008 Team Suite contain everything? Like someone said earlier in a small team you have to buy the whole suite anyway...I'm sure not too many people bought Architect and Database but skipped Developer.Anonymous
August 06, 2007
The VS marketing team should be embarrassed by this. This overwhelmingly and unnecessarily confusing and complex, and just serves to reinforce all of the negative stereotypes about Microsoft. The real question is - what problem is this trying to solve (or rather, what problem is this actually solving?) Are the feature differences in each of these 14 SKUs so diverse and so attuned to specific developer roles that they justify the sheer ridiculousness of their existence? Additionally, did it occur to anyone that names like "Visual Studio Team System 2008 Team Suite" are just absurd? I feel just as bad for the Microsoft sales folks as I do for the developers who have to endure this. Discussion of the naming alone must completely undercut the value discussion.Anonymous
August 09, 2007
According to Rob Caron recently : Visual Studio 2005 Visual Studio 2008 Visual Studio 2005 Team SystemAnonymous
August 09, 2007
According to Rob Caron recently : Visual Studio 2005 Visual Studio 2008 Visual Studio 2005 Team SystemAnonymous
August 09, 2007
PingBack from http://msdnrss.thecoderblogs.com/2007/08/10/name-translation-from-visual-studio-2005-to-2008-products/Anonymous
August 09, 2007
VS 2008 SKUsAnonymous
August 09, 2007
VS 2008 SKUsAnonymous
August 09, 2007
"Visual Visual Basic 2008 Express Edition" This is a typo surely?Anonymous
August 10, 2007
My opinion is that there should be 1 (ONE) Visual Studio. You'd use profiles to create different layouts and load different parts. So database admin profile is very different from web developer profile. The simplicity of 1 program for developing on Windows is just very appealing. Make it $699 and you're set. In fact, I have no idea why you want to make so much money on the IDE, but I think free as in beer would be too much to ask.Anonymous
August 10, 2007
In fact, not only should Microsoft drop the many versions of Visual Studio, they should also combine all the Express versions into one Express version (currently it makes no sense). Visual Studio 2008 Express Visual Studio 2008 Professional Visual Studio 2008 Team Doesn't that simplicity appeal to you? Probably deep inside it does, but the marketing guys just love their product differentiation.Anonymous
August 24, 2007
I wanted to point out a post that Rob Caron put out a few weeks back that is worth mentioning, as itAnonymous
August 24, 2007
I wanted to point out a post that Rob Caron put out a few weeks back that is worth mentioning, as itAnonymous
August 24, 2007
Rob, Apologies for my naivety but could you point out the difference between "Visual Studio Team System 2008" and "Visual Studio Team System 2008 Team Suite"? I'm still confused by the whole Team Suite thing (great products though they are). You are hereby added to my feed reader so I'll hope for a reply soon :) -Jamie Visual Studio Team System 2008 Team Suite is a product SKU that encapsulates of all of the team editions (Architect, Database, Development, and Test). Visual Studio Team System 2008 is the name of a product family that includes the above, plus Team Foundation Server and Test Load Agent. Visual Studio Team System 2008 is like the Microsoft Office 2007 system. You can't buy it, but you can buy the products that are a part of it. Does that help?Anonymous
August 28, 2007
Urlop się pokończył, znalazłem w końcu trochę czasu aby się pobawić nową betą VS.NET 2008 , która zostałaAnonymous
August 28, 2007
Urlop się pokończył, znalazłem w końcu trochę czasu aby się pobawić nową betą VS.NET 2008 , która zostałaAnonymous
September 12, 2007
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