Release: Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 Service Pack 1

Quoting from Microsoft:


Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 Service Pack 1 (SP1) contains the latest software updates for Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 that improve the reliability, performance and manageability of Virtual PC. Updates have been made to improve the performance of Windows XP Service Pack 2 as a guest in Virtual PC, to improve the manageability of virtual machines when used with SMS 2003 Service Pack 1, and to provide support for running Windows Server 2003 Standard Edition as the host operating system.

Some of the fixes included with SP1 have been previously released as separate updates. This service pack combines them into one update.

You can download it here.

Cherry OS lets PCs emulate Macs

Quoting from MacCentral:

Microsoft Corp.’s Virtual PC software has been lauded by critics as a convenient way for Mac users to run Windows applications on their Macs, but what if you need to do the opposite? Maui, Hawaii-based MXS announced Tuesday the release of Cherry OS, an emulator that does the exact opposite — its developer says Cherry OS lets PCs run Mac OS X instead.

The virtual machine emulated by Cherry OS sports full network capabilities and has complete access to the host computer’s hardware resources — hard drive, CPU, RAM, FireWire, USB, PCI, PCMCIA bus, Ethernet networking and modem. It purportedly runs at about 80 percent of the performance of the host CPU, according to the developer.

“Now about 600 million PC users can have the MAC advantage,” said the software’s developer, Arben Kryeziu. “One computer to use all software and if PC users would use MAC software to get email, perhaps they would avoid viruses, Trojans and spy-ware.”

Cherry OS is being distributed as an online download, and costs US$49.95. Mac operating system software and application software is not included.

Whitepaper: Introducing Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 on xSeries servers

IBM Redbooks department just released another virtualization redpaper, this time on Microsoft new product Virtual Server 2005.

Here the abstract:


Businesses continually seek ways to reduce cost and risk while increasing quality and agility in their IT infrastructure. Virtualization is a key enabling technology that can be leveraged to achieve these business benefits. Virtualization technology enables customers to run multiple operating systems concurrently on a single physical server, where each of the operating systems runs as a self-contained computer.

Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 hosted on Windows Server 2003 and IBM xSeries servers delivers the performance necessary to carry out time- and cost-saving tasks through virtualization technology in an enterprise-ready computing environment with advanced levels of scalability, manageability, and reliability.

This redpaper introduces Virtual Server and describes the main features and functions, the product’s architecture, and the typical customer uses. It also introduces the management tools available, including IBM Director with Virtual Machine Manager, and Microsoft Operations Manager.

This redpaper is targeted at IT specialists who need to understand this new product and how it can be used in their environment

You can download it (still draft) here.

HP moves to a more modular real-time infrastructure approach

Quoting from Gartner:


– Event
On 20 September 2004, HP announced a change in its Adaptive Enterprise (AE) product strategy. HP has retired the high-cost, low-volume UDC and will move toward a more modular strategy, with more individual products and services.

– Analysis
UDC was HP’s first solution in its AE strategy, which focused on integrating software, hardware and services and reducing the costs of managing scale-out architectures. HP customers and prospects embraced the vision behind UDC, but did not buy into its “rip out and replace” philosophy. Its approach was hardware-centric, and Gartner has always believed that its cost of entry was too high. After several years, HP realized it could not make a positive return on its large investment in UDC without changing its course. Now HP has shifted toward a more evolutionary, software-centric approach, similar to the direction IBM took in 2003 after several software acquisitions.

With UDC, HP became the first major IT supplier to act upon the RTI vision and introduce it widely to CIOs. HP plans to exploit these relationships as it introduces more modular, lower-cost solutions. Rather than replacing UDC, these solutions will serve as entry points that may eventually lead to UDC-like functions:

HP OpenView Server Provisioning and Configuration Management Software: Novadigm, which HP acquired in April 2004, provides scale-out provisioning and configuration management in software. Unlike UDC, it can start small and grow as needed.
HP BladeSystem: HP has improved its blade manageability, providing UDC-like functions, including scale-out provisioning, support for virtualization and patch management. Like UDC, HP’s BladeSystem is a hardware replacement.
HP Virtual Server Environment (VSE): UDC was optimized for scale-out architectures (which enable clustering or splitting up the workload), but customers wanted it to handle scale-up (increases in size and power), as well. HP will enhance VSE in 2004 and 2005 to support automatic scaling of partitioned Integrity and HP 9000 server resources based on changing business priorities.
Finally, HP will continue to offer outsourcing services with utility pricing. Its consulting services will remain focused on moving customers toward the AE vision.

– Bottom Line
If you’re interested in the AE strategy, consider this the right move for HP and its customers. HP will be able to invest its resources in more modular, less disruptive solutions for RTI. HP has a sound OpenView software base to use as a foundation for a growing and competitive IT operations management software business. The company’s infrastructure strategy now more closely resembles IBM’s. Its success will depend on its execution.

VMware User Groups gathering steam

Quoting from Virtual Strategy Magazine:


This is the year for the North American VMware User Group (VMUG).

The first group met in Dallas in August, two more in Boston and Ottawa-Montreal have met in September, and over the next few weeks there are kickoff meetings in Calgary, Silver Spring MD, San Diego, Chicago, Philadelphia and Kansas City, MO.

The groups are meant to share best practices and provide a forum for new ideas and product optimization. VMware contributes product information, news and technical input, as requested by each group. And sometimes, for the kickoff meetings, lunch!

Michael Williams of Occidental Petroleum and Percy Gonzales of Mary Kay started the first North American VMUG in the Dallas/Fort Worth area. Williams is a senior systems engineer and has worked with VMware for more than four years, since the release of Workstation 2.0. Gonzales began working with VMware during four years at Microsoft as a Lab Manager and Test Engineer for ISA server MSMQ Embedded NT and IVR.

Their reasons for starting the DFWVMUG revolve around communication and collaboration. Williams, who recruited his friend Percy to work with him on the project, felt that getting big companies who are users of VMware to speak with a single voice could help get software vendors to support their applications running on virtual servers. Gonzales hopes to get more documentation for the many ways of using VMware, and to encourage collaboration among the VMUG network members.

Both Williams and Gonzales speak highly of VMware’s support of their group and its goals. “Their participation is going to be strictly whatever we want them to do. This isn’t going to be a marketing thing,” Williams says. They are both impressed with how VMware has provided resources, even at the developer level, to address their questions.

More VMUGs will be starting up. Look for groups in Atlanta, Denver and NY/NJ soon. VMware also wants to help groups start in the following areas:

Northern CA
NC/SC
Florida
NorthWest (WA, OR)
Ohio/Western PA
South (GA, AL, TN, AK, MS, LA)
Midwest
MN/North Central
Toronto
EMEA
APAC

If you’d like to start a group in one of these areas, or in one not listed, visit www.vmware.com/vcommunity/usergroups for more information.

And don’t forget to let Virtual Strategy Magazine know, so we can post your meeting on the site!

Dell bundles VMware partitioning on PowerEdges

Quoting from Computer Business ReviewOnline:


But to speed up the adoption of a new technology, or to meet the demand for it, it is often just easier to prebundle it back at the factory and support it through a single vendor.

And that is what Dell did this week for the Oracle 10g database running on Windows and for the ESX Server virtual partitioning software from the VMware subsidiary of disk array maker EMC Corp.

On the Oracle front, Dell has been able to negotiate an exclusive prebundling agreement for the entry Oracle 10g Standard Edition One implementation of Oracle’s latest relational database. 10g Standard Edition One is the relatively inexpensive variant of the 10g database that runs on uniprocessor or two-way servers and which costs $4,995 per processor. (Oracle 10g Standard Edition, which runs on four-way servers, and Enterprise Edition, which runs on larger machines, cost $15,000 and $40,000 per processor, respectively.)

The bundling agreement is part of a broader partnership that Oracle and Dell initiated two years ago as they decided that it was better to cluster two-way and four-way servers than try to sell big SMP boxes. Because Dell doesn’t have big SMP boxes–and has no intention of creating them now that database clustering technologies have matured–this strategy makes sense and is a necessity for Dell. But while Oracle talks about “scale out” architectures, it still gets the bulk of its sales and profits on big “scale up” SMP machines, and it is very eager to sell Enterprise Edition on such machines. Make no mistake about that. Oracle can and does sell on both sides of that street.

Under the deal the two companies announced yesterday, Dell will begin bundling Oracle 10g Standard Edition One on its PowerEdge 2850 rack-mounted servers immediately and will extend the bundling to the 2800 tower servers starting in the fourth quarter. These Dell servers use Intel’s 64-bit Xeon chips (with current speeds of up to 3.6GHz) and support up to 8GB of main memory each. The odds favor Dell offering a similar deal on 10g Standard Edition and the future “Potomac” 64-bit Xeon MPs when they become available early next year. The entry server bundles from Dell will also include the company’s PowerVault 220S external SCSI disk arrays. The servers will run Microsoft Corp’s Windows Server 2003 operating system. This offering is an alternative to the Oracle bundles on PowerEdge servers that Dell offers on Red Hat Inc’s Linux platform.

Dell also announced yesterday that it would be pushing VMware’s ESX Server virtualization product on its PowerEdge 1850 (1U) and 2850 (2U) Xeon-64 servers. While Dell has had a partnership with VMware for quite some time to sell its GSX Server and ESX Server, this offering goes a little bit further in that Dell is selling pretested systems (but not preconfigured) that have been certified to run specific VMware virtualization software and offering front-line technical support for the whole shebang. Dell is only offering ESX Server as part of this deal, which is the low-level virtualization software from VMware that has the best isolation between virtual machines, in that it runs on the bare metal server, not within another operating system that could, in theory, fail and take down all of the virtual machines. Dell is selling ESX Server 2.1.2, which has been tweaked to support the 64-bit “Nocona” Xeon processors, as well as VMware’s Virtual Center Management Server. Dell is also supporting the CX300 and CX500 SAN arrays that it makes in conjunction with EMC. Dell pricing for ESX Server starts at $4,688 for these two PowerEdge servers, including Dell support, which is backed by VMware’s Platinum support. Dell is also supporting the Virtual SMP features of ESX Server (which allow a single virtual machine to span across two physical processors) and VMotion technology, which allows the workload running inside one virtual machine on one physical machine to be transported across the network to another partition on another machine. This offer is available in the United States and Europe.

Dell is not, by the way, offering pretested GSX Server configurations on these machines, although GSX Server will work on it. GSX Server allows multiple virtual machines to run inside a host operating system.

Xbox team joins Virtual PC development

Quoting from AppleInsider:


Microsoft’s Xbox team has been assigned to the development of Virtual PC’s native graphics card support, sources tell AppleInsider.

Feeling pressure from both Apple and G5 customers, Microsoft this summer cut several key enhancements from its Virtual PC 7.0 Windows emulation software in order to deliver a G5 compatible solution without further delays.

One of the features reportedly shelved until a future release was native graphics card support. But precisely what is delaying this feature remains a mystery to even some members of the Virtual PC team, as they are not the ones responsible for the implementation.

According to sources, Virtual PC’s native graphics card support is being handled exclusively by Microsoft’s Xbox team. Though not expected for several months, the feature will reportedly demand a graphics card that meets the same level of graphics sophistication required for Apple’s Core Image and Video technology.

For Macintosh systems that sport a compatible ATI graphics card, future versions of Virtual PC will emulate an original Radeon with up to 32MB of virtual video memory. Likewise, for Macs equipped with a compliant Nvidia graphics card, sources said that the emulated chipset will be a Geforce 3 with up to 32MB of virtual video memory.

The performance and speed of Virtual PC’s emulated graphics will depend on the speed of the host machine’s graphics and the number of available processors, sources added.

In February, Microsoft released the Software Development Kit (SDK) for its forthcoming Xbox 2 video game console. Since the Xbox 2 will utilize IBM processors similar to the ones used in today’s Macintosh systems, the SDK was seeded to developers on dual Apple Power Mac G5 systems running a custom Windows NT Kernel.

HP launches BladeSystem and delivers the next phase of Utility Computing

Quoting from TMCnet:


HP today announced that it will deliver the next phase of utility computing capabilities through a portfolio of lower cost, modular offerings including the new HP BladeSystem. The HP BladeSystem is an integrated environment building on current HP blade servers, services and networking plus powerful new management software and virtualization tools to help lower the overall cost of blades ownership.

To accelerate adoption of the HP BladeSystem, HP will provide installation and start-up services of blade management software for a low price of just $1,600 per engagement.

HP’s modular approach to utility computing makes it easier for customers in volume markets to acquire and integrate the capabilities of the HP Utility Data Center into existing environments and deliver information technology (IT) as a service. In addition to the HP BladeSystem, the following modular utility computing offerings are available from HP:

– HP Virtual Server Environment — automatically grows and shrinks vertical, scale-up resources in real time according to changing business priorities;

– HP OpenView Change and Configuration management solutions automate the change and configuration of IT resources to reduce operational costs of data center environments; and

– HP Utility Services delivers pay-as-you-go computing through HP Managed Services.

Bausch & Lomb deploys the HP BladeSystem

Bausch & Lomb has selected HP BladeSystem servers to bring greater value and overall efficiencies to its IT infrastructure.

“At Bausch & Lomb, we use HP blade servers to help us streamline our datacenter to better synchronize IT with evolving business needs,” said David Della Vedova, vice president IT, Global Technology Services, Bausch & Lomb. “As a result, we improved efficiency, customer responsiveness and reduced datacenter costs by dramatically reducing deployment and ongoing management expenses. We chose HP, a pioneer in the blade server industry, because of its ability to offer a complete blade solution including hardware, software, services and virtualization capabilities.”

Based on industry standards, integrated blade systems can deliver lower infrastructure costs — often 25 percent less expensive overall than comparable traditional rack-mount infrastructures and, with automated control, lower annual support costs — more than doubling the number of devices that can be managed with the same amount of staff. The HP BladeSystem is designed to build on this value by offering overall network management and virtualization through resource utilization and services, changing how customers look at a blade ecosystem.

“HP looks forward to extending the value of our BladeSystem family of solutions together with partners to meet the needs of enterprise and small and medium business customers. In fact, by 2008, we expect that 50 percent of HP’s scale-out architecture business will be based on the HP BladeSystem,” said Rick Becker, vice president and general manager, BladeSystem Division, HP. “HP’s new, modular approach to delivering utility-like capabilities with the HP BladeSystem will put customers on a fast track to becoming an Adaptive Enterprise.”

New management software tools, including a single, dynamic hub for blades

At the center of any infrastructure, companies need to implement strong management and virtualization tools to allow them to align IT resources with business needs. HP has integrated Utility Data Center capabilities into the HP BladeSystem management suite of tools, which is designed to manage, control and virtualize an existing IT infrastructure as one system from a single remote console in order to maximize utilization and automate complex, manual tasks.

Key new management software tools, integrated with HP OpenView technology, can be applied to existing or new blade infrastructures:

– HP Systems Insight Manager 4.2 (SIM) — now optimized to manage the complete HP BladeSystem environment, SIM 4.2 is the single hub of control through one console for all system components and access to all tools for complete lifecycle management. SIM 4.2 is the first version of SIM to leverage plug-ins including HP OpenView technology, providing customers with a single, standards-based tool that enables client, storage, network and power management, server deployment, in addition to performance and workload management.

– HP Essentials Virtual Machine Management Pack — integrated with SIM 4.2, the pack provides management, control and a unified view of virtual machines and associated host server resources, including virtual machine products from Microsoft and VMware.

– HP Essentials Automation Controller Pack — coordinates the actions of other HP management tools to enable simplified and automated event-based policy and tasks across the blade infrastructures including provisioning of compute nodes, operating systems, IP addresses, virtual local area networks (VLANs), load balancers and storage LUNs.

– HP Essentials Patch and Vulnerability Pack — integrated into SIM 4.2 and utilizing HP OpenView Radia, the pack enables known software vulnerabilities to be automatically identified across the HP BladeSystem and permanently fixed using HP patch management technology.

– Other upcoming tools include the HP Essentials Intelligent Networking Pack, which detects and analyzes network bottlenecks; HP Essentials Insight Lights-Out 1.62, a built-in management processor for quick and easy setup of blade servers and enclosures; and power governing technology for Intel(R) Xeon(TM)-based blade servers that provides dynamic changes in processor frequency and voltage.

New services and financing to help implement the Adaptive Enterprise

Two new types of services are also now available, including defined installation and startup services as well as statement of work services. The new installation services provide detailed knowledge transfer in HP SIM fundamentals and help get HP BladeSystem management up and running in a pilot environment in a single day at $1,600 per session. The new statement of work services, charged at an hourly rate, are designed to deploy the HP BladeSystem management tools in a production environment over multiple days. Customers are assigned a service delivery specialist and provided with detailed documentation.

Customers also can finance a full range of HP solutions through HP Financial Services, and with the newly announced HP Jumpstart Success offer, companies can choose between low lease rates or deferring all payments until January 2005 at no additional cost. This special offer applies to all HP products and professional services — including HP BladeSystem solutions, PCs, servers, storage devices and network and systems management software.