Microsoft rethinks virtual machines licensing?

Posted by virtualization.info Staff   |   Wednesday, October 20th, 2004   |  

Quoting from TechWorld:

Microsoft is pondering how to license when multiple instances of an application are run on a single computer. The company, however,is not eyeing a plan for utility-based computing, in which charges are based on individual usage.

The company is re-examining its options after yesterday’s announcement that multi-core processors would be treated as a single processor for purposes of software licensing.

Company officials discussed Microsoft’s positions at this week’s SoftSummit conference in California. In the area of virtualisation, in which multiple, virtual machines might be running on the same system, the company is considering strategies, according to Andrew Lees, corporate vice president for server and tools marketing at Microsoft.

Right now, Microsoft charges based on hardware capabilities irrespective of software partitioning or virtualisation. A user site might have 1,000 virtual machines running 1,000 instances of the same application, deployed on a four-processor computer, he said. Under current policy, the user would be charged for four processors, not for running the application 1,000 times.

“We’re currently looking at that now, and the whole virtualisation scenarios that are enabled are really mind-blowing,” Lees said.

The company is seeking feedback on how to proceed, he said. “We ideally want it to be simple,” Lees said. Whether or not Microsoft would generate more or less revenue based on a virtualisation licensing scheme is not now known, said Lees.

In the area of utility computing, Microsoft officials said the definition of the term fluctuates. “We all agree, I don’t think anybody in here can have a consistent definition of what utility computing actually is,” said Cori Hartje, director of worldwide licensing and pricing at Microsoft. She added she hears it described as usage-based or feature computing.

“We don’t really have a utility model today. We don’t see ourselves building one,” Hartje said.

While utility computing might be a good model for some applications, Microsoft applications such as Office and Exchange do not lend themselves to that kind of model and customers do not have the infrastructure to support it, Hartje said.

“(Utility computing) is not really something that we’re rally working on,” said Hartje.

A SoftSummit attendee from Hitachi Data Systems said he could understand why Microsoft would not want to use utility computing, but that the concept is being studied by his company for possible use in selling storage systems.

“We’re seeing customer demand for a utility model,” said Steve Eckersley, an official with pricing and reseller operations at Hitachi.

Microsoft does offer Exchange on a per-email box pricing plan, for example, but charging per email would provide a disincentive to use the application, Lees said.


Labels:

blog comments powered by Disqus


virtualization.info Newest articles
Brian Gammage puts some order in VMware’s strategy

May 24th, 2012

Today Milan hosted the VMware Forum 2012, during the opening keynote Brian Gammage, VMware’s Chief Market Technologist, tried to collect all the news and declarations we heard in the last…

VMware acquires Wanova

May 23rd, 2012

Yesterday VMware announced the acquisition of Wanova Inc. a company whose main product is called Mirage.
Mirage is a centralized management and recovery solution for physical desktop images over the…

Paper: VMware vSphere Metro Storage Cluster Case Study

May 23rd, 2012

Yesterday VMware published a paper focused on VMware vMSC (vSphere Metro Storage Cluster), a new configuration within the VMware Hardware Compatibility List intended for environments where disaster/downtime avoidance is a…

EMC acquires Syncplicity

May 22nd, 2012

Yesterday, during its annual conference in Las Vegas, EMC announced the acquisition of Syncplicity, a cloud-storage privately held startup founded in 2008 and based in Menlo Park, California.
Terms…

Release: Oracle VM Server for x86 3.1

May 21st, 2012

On May 18th Oracle announced the general availability of version 3.1 of its x86 enterprise virtualization solution VM Server.
This release follows 3.0 announced on August 24th 2011.
All the new…

VMware shows View 5.1 performance improvements

May 21st, 2012

In this post, published on May 18 in VROOM! Blog, the VMware’s Performance Team presented some of the most significant enhancements and optimizations brought to Teradici‘s PCoIP protocol in the…

NVIDIA introduces World’s Firs Virtualized GPU

May 17th, 2012

On May 15th NVIDIA unveiled the NVIDIA® VGX™ platform that will be available later this year through NVIDIA’s hardware OEM and VDI partners.
This new platform promises to deliver…

Microsoft announces Assessment and Planning Toolkit 7.0 Beta Program

May 17th, 2012

Microsoft announced this week the new Beta version of its capacity planning tool Microsoft Assessment and Planning (MAP) 7.0 Beta.
The Beta program opened on May 15th and the review…

VMware announces vFabric Suite 5.1

May 15th, 2012

Today VMware announced VMware vFabric Suite 5.1, expected to be generally available in Q2 2012.
vFabric Suite 5.1 includes vFabric Application Director, to automate the deployment and management of vFabric…

VMware CTO talks about R&D plans for the future

May 15th, 2012

On April 4 Stephen Herrod, VMware’s CTO, has attended, as guest speaker, at a VMUG meeting in Italy.
One of the key point of the speech, documented in one hour-long…

Citrix Hosted Server VDI Tech Preview

May 14th, 2012

Last week Citrix announced a new tech preview for Hosted Server VDI technology that allows cloud providers to leverage Microsoft SPLA to host VDI-style desktops obtaining a pay-as-you-go monthly subscription licensing…

Release: Atlantis ILIO Diskless VDI 3.2

May 11th, 2012

On May 7 Atlantis Computing announced the general availability of its Atlantis ILIO Diskless VDI 3.2, this product, tailored in particular for VMware View 5.1, enables virtual desktops deployment…

Citrix unveils Project Aruba

May 11th, 2012

On May 7 Citrix announced a technology preview of Project Aruba that extends Citrix VDI all-in-one proposal for the SMB market, VDI-in-a-Box, with personal vDisk technology.
VDI-in-a-Box, inherited from Kaviza…

Cloud Sidekick announced Early Access release of Cato EE

May 10th, 2012

On May 7 Cloud Sidekick announced the Early Access Program release of Cato Enterprise Edition (EE) which extends the Community Edition (CE) with Storm Deployment Automation and support for…

 
Monthly Archive