Lots of debate and disagreement on my recommendation to wait for SQL
Server 2008 instead of upgrading to SQL Server 2005 now. What's funny
is that I wrote the recommendation a few weeks ago and the day before I
scheduled it to release, MS announced a Feb date for 2008.
I can agree that people are nervous about SS2K8, and Microsoft could
definitely mess it up at RTM. After all, they have issues with service
packs in quite a few of their products (SS2K SP3 became SP3a, Ss2K5 SP2
got rereleased), but I don't think they well. My thoughts were that
based on past history, SS2K8 is really a "R2" product, a point release,
but they've included enough features, like the policy stuff, that they
can sell it as a new version. While I don't agree with that as a
customer, I can see why they do it.
So while I think you should wait to upgrade if you haven't already done
so, I don't think you should ignore 2005 completely. It's a good
platform to do some testing on and get ready for 2008. I doubt 2008
functions much differently, so 2005 can help you prepare, test
DTS->SSIS upgrades, etc. and then I'd upgrade next spring, prob late
March, early April. That way you can wait until 2014 to upgrade again
instead of being pushed out of 2005 in 2011.
Also, if you want to upgrade every other release, because you want a
fairly stable platform, I'd get on the 2000/2008/2014 cycle, not the
7.0/2005/2011 cycle. The latter are the "1.0"s of each version of the
platform. If you go back to 6.0/6.5, you'd much rather have gone from
6.5 -> 2000 than 6.0->7.0