Updated: July 9, 2020 (August 8, 2011)
SidebarOffice 365 and BPOS
Office 365 is a set of service plans that combines the current versions of Microsoft-hosted online services (such as Exchange Online Standard) with optional subscription licenses to Office Professional Plus.
Office 365 includes the next versions of the following Microsoft-hosted services:
- Exchange Online, powered by Exchange Server 2010
- SharePoint Online, powered by SharePoint Server 2010
- Lync Online, powered by Lync Server 2010.
Exchange Online and SharePoint Online are updates of earlier online services; Lync Online takes over the role of two earlier services, Live Meeting (Web conferencing) and Communications Online (presence, instant messaging, and two-way voice, video, and application sharing). For most customers, the services will be offered in multitenant configurations, in which customers share physical servers and other resources. For large government and commercial customers, Microsoft also offers hosting on hardware dedicated to the customer.
Like the Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) that it replaces, Office 365 enables organizations to hand over deployment, management, and security patching to Microsoft for services such as e-mail, freeing up IT personnel for more important tasks. Office 365 cannot yet match servers deployed on-premises feature for feature, but it requires fewer compromises than BPOS did. Office 365 also offers advantages that competitors such as Google or Zoho will find hard to match, such as easier migration from on-premises software and lower user training costs.
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