The delay in Windows Vista will affect the next version of Office, too. Microsoft said Thursday it will put off the consumer release of Office 2007 so it is in line with the new release schedule for Vista.Like Vista, Office 2007 will be available to business customers through Microsoft’s volume licensing program by the end of 2006. However, the product won’t be sold to consumers until January 2007, the company said. Through a spokeswoman for its public relations firm Waggener Edstrom, Microsoft called the change a “business decision,” and said the development of the software will be completed on schedule before the end of the year. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe Microsoft plans to release two business editions of Office 2007—Office Professional Plus and Office Enterprise. These will be available to business customers through Microsoft’s volume licensing program before the end of 2006, the company said. The OEM (original equipment manufacturer) edition, Office Basic 2007, also will be available to those partners at the same time. Consumer versions of Office—Office Home and Student 2007, Office Professional 2007, Office Small Business 2007 and Office Standard 2007—will be sold on retail shelves and through other consumer sales channels starting in January 2007, according to Microsoft. Microsoft still expects to release a public Beta 2 of Office 2007 by late June, the company added.The Redmond, Wash.-based software company on Thursday also unveiled a restructuring of the division that oversees both Windows and its Windows Live Web-based services. As part of the restructuring, the leader of the Office team, Steve Sinofsky, was moved to head up a new group within Platforms & Services called the Windows and Windows Live Group. For more, check out Microsoft Restructures Windows Unit. Thursday’s reshuffle also broke up the responsibilities that had previously fallen under Microsoft’s MSN division into two groups—the Online Business Group and the Windows Live Platform Group.These organizational changes come on the heels of yet another shipping delay for Windows Vista, announced on Tuesday. Microsoft pushed the consumer release of the OS to January 2007, a move that means retailers and hardware partners will miss getting Vista PCs into the hands of consumers during the traditional retail rush of the Christmas holiday season. Business customers, however, will have access to the business editions of Vista in November through Microsoft’s volume licensing program.-Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News ServiceThis article is posted on our Microsoft Informer page. For more news on the Redmond, Wash.-based powerhouse, keep checking in.For related news coverage, read Microsoft Bumps Vista Launch to Jan. ’07 and Microsoft Execs: PCs Will Be Ready for Vista.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost Four Leadership Motions make leading transformative work easier The Four Leadership Motions can be extremely beneficial —they don’t just drive results among software developers, they help people make extraordinary progress wherever they lead. By Jason Fraser, Director, Product Management & Design, VMware Tanzu Labs, Public Sector Sep 21, 2023 5 mins IT Leadership feature The year’s top 10 enterprise AI trends — so far In 2022, the big AI story was the technology emerging from research labs and proofs-of-concept, to it being deployed throughout enterprises to get business value. This year started out about the same, with slightly better ML algorithms and improved d By Maria Korolov Sep 21, 2023 16 mins Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence opinion 6 deadly sins of enterprise architecture EA is a complex endeavor made all the more challenging by the mistakes we enterprise architects can’t help but keep making — all in an honest effort to keep the enterprise humming. By Peter Wayner Sep 21, 2023 9 mins Enterprise Architecture IT Strategy Software Development opinion CIOs worry about Gen AI – for all the right reasons Generative AI is poised to be the most consequential information technology of the decade. Plenty of promise. But expect novel new challenges to your enterprise data platform. By Mike Feibus Sep 20, 2023 7 mins CIO Generative AI Artificial Intelligence Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe