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Move over, Googleplex. Here comes Microsoft CodePlex.

CodePlex is not the name for a new wing of the ever-expanding Microsoft campus headquarters. Instead, it is Microsoft’s newest code-repository site, aimed especially at shared- and open-source programmers.

On May 15, Microsoft went live with the beta version of its CodePlex site. The site, which is coded in C# and is built on top of a hosted version of the Microsoft Team Foundation Server platform, includes support for wiki-based team communication, to RSS feed aggregation, to forums.

Microsoft’s plan is to take the CodePlex site “more formally live” in late June or early July, said Bill Hilf, director of Microsoft’s platform strategy.

Click here to read more about Microsoft’s new shared source project.

Sources said Microsoft’s current plan is to launch the final version of the site at the Open Source Business Conference in London in late June.

Hilf described CodePlex as a “community development Web site” that is an outgrowth of Microsoft’s shared-source effort.

“We are fostering .Net and community developers who are doing community stuff,” Hilf said in an interview with Microsoft Watch. “We set out to create something using our best and latest software that would let folks use any license they want” to make their code available, including the GNU General Public License, OpenBSD and Microsoft’s own shared-source licenses.

Read the full story on Microsoft Watch: Microsoft Launches ‘CodePlex,’ a New Code Repository Site