Updated: July 12, 2020 (April 10, 2006)
Analyst ReportTerminal Services CAL Transition Extended
Customers who are eligible for free Terminal Services Client Access Licenses (TS CALs) have been given extra time to obtain them. The change affects customers who had licensesthrough OEM, retail, or volume licensingfor Windows XP before Apr. 24, 2003, the date that Windows Server 2003 was released.
The special TS CALs offer was necessary because of a change in the requirements for using TS CALs. Beginning with Windows Server 2000, Microsoft no longer required a special TS CAL for customers who were using the latest version of the Windows Client, which at the time was Windows 2000. This change reflected a policy of “desktop equivalency,” the idea that a Windows 2000 client user should not require an extra CAL to view an equivalent desktop when they accessed Windows 2000 Terminal Services.
As welcome as it was, desktop equivalency was difficult for customers to manage if they had multiple desktop clients, some (e.g., Windows 98) requiring a TS CAL and those with Windows 2000 or Windows XP not requiring one. The policy also had an impact on Windows Server revenue. As a result, when it released Windows Server 2003, Microsoft decided to revert back to requiring TS CALs for all clients.
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