
<p>Computerworld - Microsoft today shut down talk that it would soon stop shipping new versions of its Exchange Server, promising customers that it would continue to develop and release the popular email software for on-premises use.</p><p>In a post to the Exchange team's blog, Perry Clarke, who heads development, tried to put those fears to rest. "Microsoft has no plans to stop delivering on-premises releases of Exchange," Clarke wrote.</p><p>Clarke also said that customers could expect an Exchange release cadence of two to three years going forward, and that engineers are, in fact, working on the next iteration.</p><p>Exchange 2010 shipped in November 2009, and the follow-up, Exchange 2013, launched in October 2012, a three-year gap. Microsoft also took three years between Exchange 2007 and 2010.</p><p><a href="http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9244034/">Keep reading...</a></p>