Microsoft adapts Windows Server System licensing to virtualization scenarios

Quoting from the Microsoft official announcement:

As IT solutions become more complex, operational costs often continue to climb. It should come as no surprise then that organizations have been clamoring for ways to scale back the amount of time and money they spend maintaining their IT systems so they can instead ramp up efforts to better run their enterprise and bolster their bottom line.

Through its Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), a cross-company effort to address IT customers’ desire to be more cost-efficient, proactive and responsive to business requirements, Microsoft is attempting to address customer needs by making it easier for them to take advantage of the benefits of server virtualization technology. Organizations that virtualize computing environments can increase operational efficiency through server consolidation, application re-hosting, disaster recovery and software test and development.

With the help of customers, partners and industry analysts, Microsoft has developed new licensing and use rights to better enable customers to take advantage of virtualization and accommodate advances in technology. To get a sense of how Microsoft has adapted its Windows Server System licensing to reflect this growing demand, PressPass spoke with Brent Callinicos, Microsoft’s corporate vice president for Worldwide Licensing and Pricing.

PressPass: What changes to Windows Server System Licensing is Microsoft announcing today?

Callinicos: Customers are using virtualization technologies more and more for a variety of reasons – as part of server consolidations, for test and development, to create a more agile infrastructure that allows them to move workloads from machine to machine regardless of hardware, to establish better business continuity and to reduce downtime.

We wanted our licensing to allow customers to embrace virtualization benefits and eliminate any potential barriers. As a result, we have devised licensing policies that we feel best reflects how our customers want to use this virtualization technology.

First, we are licensing by running instance, which is to say the number of images, installations and/or copies of the original software stored on a local or storage network. Instead of licensing every inactive or stored virtual instance of a Windows Server System product, customers can now create and store an unlimited number of instances, including those for back-up and recovery, and only pay for the maximum number of running instances at any given time.

Second, we are providing easier deployment across servers. Customers can now move active instances from one licensed server to another licensed server without limitation, as long as the physical server is licensed for that same product. So, customers will now be able to store a set of instances on a storage network and deploy any instance to a rack server or blade server that has an available license for that server software.

Third, we are providing customers with greater flexibility with Windows Server System products that are currently licensed by processor, such as Microsoft SQL Server, BizTalk Server, Internet Security Accelerator Server and others. Customers can now stack multiple virtual instances on a machine by licensing for the number of virtual processors being used, rather than for all of the physical processors on the server.

Lastly, we recognize customers are using virtualization to consolidate servers. Therefore, we now have a policy for Windows Server 2003 R2 Enterprise Edition that allows customers to run up to four running virtual instances on one server at no additional cost. And we’ll go further with the Datacenter Edition of Windows Server “Longhorn,” the code name for the next version of Windows Server, by allowing customers to run unlimited virtual instances on one server at no additional charge.

PressPass: What role did partners, customers and analysts play in affecting this change in licensing?

Callinicos: Last year we looked at the advancements in hardware, specifically how dual- core and multi-core processors will impact the industry. We reviewed that along with our existing policies and set out to ensure that our policies are flexible enough to allow customers to take advantage of the performance benefits associated with dual-core chips without incurring additional server software costs.

At about the same time, we began to look at other emerging technologies, like virtualization. We sought the advice of several customers that participate on our Licensing Advisory Council and expressed a desire to create licensing policies that reflected how customers wanted to use this technology. The council viewed this as an industry-leading measure. We also talked to partners and industry analysts and asked them to research how customers were using virtualization and what they valued about the benefits associated with using software in virtual environments. We learned that customers want to more dynamically deploy their virtual machines, and we wanted our licensing to reflect that.

From the very beginning, partners, customers and analysts have aided our licensing evolution and have taken a hands-on approach in the process. Response to date has been very favorable.

PressPass: What impact will today’s licensing announcements have on customers and the industry?

Callinicos: There are several benefits to virtual-machine technology. There is a reduction in total cost of ownership by hardware utilization and consolidating workloads on fewer servers. The virtual machine market is a fairly niche market. It’s somewhere in the US$400 million revenue range. We’re very early on in its mainstream adoption on x86 platforms. But hopefully with the technology support and more flexible licensing policies that Microsoft is providing, we’ll be able to make it more mainstream. We strongly believe in the benefits of virtualization, and that’s why we’ve evolved our policies to better reflect how it’s being used presently, and how we expect it to be used in the future, as customers strive to achieve self-managing dynamic systems.

PressPass: How do Microsoft’s licensing policies differ from other enterprise application vendors’ policies for virtualized environments?

Callinicos: Many software companies don’t have clearly stated licensing policies for running server software in virtual environments, so it is difficult to say. However, most are focused on licensing server software by installed copy – whether in a virtual environment or not. Based on feedback from customers and partners, we’re moving away from that to licensing server software by running instance.

Update: Ben Armstrong, Microsoft Virtual Machines Team Program Manager, published on his blog, Virtual PC Guy, a new whitepaper about the Microsoft virtualization licensing terms with all cases and explainations. It’s a must-read for everyone.

Books: Rob’s Guide to Using VMware – Second Edition

Rob’s Guide to Using VMware
Second Edition

Release Date: July, 2005
ISBN: 9080893439
Edition: 2
Pages: 352
Size: 9.2″ x 7.0″ x 1.0″

Summary
The second edition of Rob’s Guide to Using VMWare continues where the author stopped with the first edition. New topics covered in the book are VMWare ACE and VMWare GSX Server. The book now also contains information on VMWare and Linux. This new edition features an overview of the new version 5 of VMWare Workstation. Many topics which were included in the first edition have been updated and new topics have been added.

Words from the Author
This new book is updated for all the new versions of VMware products. It is based on VMware Workstation version 5 and all the tips and procedures have been updated for this latest version.
New topics include: Multiple Snapshots, Teaming virtual machines and Linux installation and configuration. There is also a section that introduces VMware ACE.

The sections covering Physical to Virtual conversion and Clustering have been updated with new techniques and they now cover new information on the complete range of VMware products, including ACE v1, GSX Server v3.2 and ESX Server v2.5.
For P2V you will find updated information on imaging techniques that can be used to copy physical machines into virtual machines. Including information on how to restore Windows and Linux machines that reside on IDE hard disks inside virtual machines with SCSI disks, such as on VMware ESX Server. The tools that I cover for P2V have been updated to include Acronis TrueImage for Windows (including server versions) and freely available Linux tools and default commands to copy a machine into a virtual machine directly via the network.

The sections on VMware GSX Server and ESX Server will get you started with these high end VMware products. The book contains an introduction to VMware’s server products which will introduce the reader to the main concepts. I have also included an introduction to VMware VirtualCenter to give you an overview of how that product can help you to manage a multi server VMware environment.

The information in this book is based on Microsoft Windows, Linux and Novell NetWare and Open Enterprise Server. For each operating system the book contains unique configuration tips on using virtual disks, networking and more.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 – VMware Overview
  • Chapter 2 – Fast Track to VMware Workstation
  • Chapter 3 – What’s New in VMware Workstation 5
  • Chapter 4 – Install Operating Systems and VMware Tools
  • Chapter 5 – Introduction to VMware ACE
  • Chapter 6 – General VMware Configuration and Tips
  • Chapter 7 – Virtual Disks, Floppies and CD-Roms
  • Chapter 8 – Performance Tuning and Optimization
  • Chapter 9 – Optimizing your Virtual Machine Environment
  • Chapter 10 – Transferring Data to and from a Virtual Machine
  • Chapter 11 – Networking Configurations
  • Chapter 12 – VMware Tips for Windows
  • Chapter 13 – VMware Tips for Linux
  • Chapter 14 – VMware Tips for Netware
  • Chapter 15 – Introduction to Physical to Virtual Conversion
  • Chapter 16 – Symantec Ghost’s Peer-to-Peer Imaging
  • Chapter 17 – Other Peer-to-Peer or Multicast Networking Solutions
  • Chapter 18 – Using Acronis True Image File Based Imaging via the Network
  • Chapter 19 – Creat a Virtual Disk from an Image File
  • Chapter 20 – Imaging the Really Cheap Way
  • Chapter 21 – Modify your Restored Opertating System to Work with VMware
  • Chapter 22 – Introduction to Clustering in VMware
  • Chapter 23 – Preparing for a Windows Server 2003 Cluster
  • Chapter 24- Preparing for a Netware 6.5 Cluster
  • Chapter 25 – Shared Disk Cluster with VMware Workstation
  • Chapter 26 – Shared Disk Cluster with VMware GSX Server
  • Chapter 27 – Shared Disk Cluster with VMware ESX Server
  • Chapter 28 – Installing Novell Cluster Services
  • Chapter 29 – Configuring Microsoft Cluster Services Software
  • Chapter 30 – Introduction to VMware GSX Server
  • Chapter 31 – Hardware & Software Requirements and Design
  • Chapter 32 – Upgrading GSX Server Software
  • Chapter 33 – Installation and Configuration on Windows
  • Chapter 34 – Installation and Configuration on Linux
  • Chapter 35 – Managing GSX Server and Virtual Machines
  • Chapter 36 – Creating and Configuring Virtual Machines on GSX Server
  • Chapter 37 – GSX Server Advanced Configurations
  • Chapter 38 – VMware ESX Server Introduction
  • Chapter 39 – Getting Started with VMware ESX Server
  • Chapter 40 – Managing Virtual Machines
  • Chapter 41 – Some Extra Tips on Using VMware ESX Server
  • Chapter 42 – Introduction to VirtualCenter

You can also buy the electronic version of this book at http://books4brains.com

Books: The HP Virtual Server Environment

The HP Virtual Server Environment
Release Date: September, 2005
ISBN: 0131855220
Edition: 1
Pages: 552
Size: 9.0″ x 7.0″ x 1.5″

Summary
Use HP virtualization to maximize IT service quality, agility, and value.

  • Includes coverage of HP’s new Integrity Virtual Machines, Global Workload Manager, Virtualization Manager, and Capacity Advisor
  • Plan, implement, and manage virtualization to drive maximum business value
  • Understand HP’s virtualization solutions for partitioning, utility pricing, high availability, and management for HP Integrity and HP 9000 servers
  • Manage your existing resources to drive unprecedented levels of utilization

Virtualization offers IT organizations unprecedented opportunities to enhance service quality, improve agility, and reduce cost by creating an automated balance in system resources. Now, there’s a comprehensive guide to virtualization based on the industry’s most flexible and complete solution: HP’s Virtual Server Environment (VSE).

Two leading HP architects and customer consultants help you identify the best “sweet spot” VSE solution for your environment-and plan, implement, and manage it.

The HP Virtual Server Environment systematically introduces VSE technologies for partitioning, utility pricing, high availability, and management, as well as HP’s powerful, unique goal-based approach to workload management. Whether you’re a solution designer, architect, or engineer, you’ll find realistic examples, deep insight, and practical tips, all with one goal: to help you maximize the business value of virtualization.

  • Architect flexible, dynamic configurations that adapt instantly to business requirements
  • Choose the right solutions from HP’s partitioning continuum: nPars, vPars, HP Integrity Virtual Machines, and Secure Resource Partitions
  • Use utility pricing solutions to deploy instant, temporary, or pay-per-use capacity wherever you need it
  • Improve utilization and control your virtual environment with HP-UX Workload Manager, HP Serviceguard, HP Global Workload Manager, Virtualization Manager, and Capacity Advisor
  • Integrate VSE technologies into heterogeneous HP-UX, Linux, and Windows environments on HP Integrity and HP 9000 servers

About the Authors

Dan Herington is the Chief Architect for HP’s Virtual Server Environment Advanced Technology Center. The ATC is a lab-based organization that has the mission to ensure the success of customers implementing solutions based on the Virtual Server Environment technologies. For the past four years he has been an architect in the lab working on HP’s industry leading Workload Manager and VSE Management products. He has also been responsible for communicating the technical vision of HP’s partitioning, utility pricing, and workload management products to the field and customers. This dual responsibility has provided him with a unique opportunity to both craft the technical message being delivered to HPs field and customers, as well as ensure that future versions of the products satisfy the requirements customers have for these solutions. He has delivered hundreds of seminars on HP’s Virtual Server Environment Technologies at customer visits, HP field and customer training sessions, and trade shows throughout the world. Most recently he has been a key contributor to defining the vision for the next generation Virtual Server Environment and its management tools, including a number of the new products covered by this book. This role has included working with the project teams that are responsible for delivering the individual products to ensure that they make up a well-integrated solution, and making sure it is easy for customers to realize the vision of an Adaptive Enterprise with these products.

Prior to rejoining HP in 2000, Dan held senior technical and management positions with a large systems integrator and a start-up software company. Dan started his career with HP in Cupertino, California where he held various technical positions in the OpenView Program. He was involved in the transition of this program from Cupertino to Ft. Collins, Colorado and later moved to Grenoble, France, where he helped incubate the OpenView program in Europe in the early 1990’s.

Bryan Jacquot is a Software Architect in HP’s Virtual Server Environment Advanced Technology Center. He has worked as both a software engineer and software architect on enterprise system administration applications for over six years. He developed the first graphical user interface for managing HP’s Superdome servers, Partition Manager. Additionally, Bryan developed the first HP-UX web-based system administration interface which is used for tuning the HP-UX kernel, Kcweb. In his current position, he serves as a technical software architect for the next generation system management tools for HP’s Virtual Server Environment. In addition, he works closely with customers to gather requirements and give presentations and training for HP’s Virtual Server Environment. Bryan holds a Bachelor’s of Science degree in Computer Science from Montana State University—Bozeman. Additionally, he is an HP Certified IT Professional, a Microsoft Certified System Administrator, and a RedHat Certified Technician.

Microsoft virtualization roadmap disclosed details

I just attended the live webcast Microsoft Virtualization Roadmap arranged to detail what to expect for the near future about virtualization.

One third of the presentation was focused on what Virtual Server 2005 is and which management tools are available todya.
Another third was focused on what Virtual Server 2005 R2 will offer.
The last third was focused on what technology will arrive next years.

The webcast recording is available here: http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=4018895

I’ll try to summarize what Mike Neil, Microsoft Virtualization Product Manager, said:

  • This year (as you already know) we can expect just the Virtual Server 2005 R2 RTM with serveral features:
    • great performance improvement in memory handling and CPU usage
    • clustering for hosts (DAS, SAN with Fiber Channel and iSCSI supported), hosts failover, VMs migration between hosts (the downtime will depend on the network speed).
      Hosts clustering will be available for free as separate download.
    • 64bit architecture support for hosts (while guests will stay on 32bit virtual architecture until Longhorn timeframe)
    • PXE boot support for virtual network interfaces
    • Linux support
    • Win2003 SP1 and WinXP SP2 support
  • On the 1H 2006 a new Virtual Server version will hit the beta, scheduled for RTM on 2H 2006, providing:
    • Much better Linux VMs performances
    • AMD and Intel virtualization technologies support (mainly providing better performances for 3rd parties VMs)
  • At the Longhorn Server timeframe (nothing more specific) a new virtualization technology will appear with the planned features:
    • hypervisor technology with microkernel approach (virtualization device drivers will not stay in the hypervisor)
    • integrated in every Longhorn Server version (will not require a dedicated OS edition)
    • AMD and Intel virtualization technologies support (mainly providing better performances for 3rd parties VMs)
    • one Parent (containing the virtualization stack) and multiple dependants Child virtual partitions
    • 64 and 32bit guests
    • multiprocessing support (up to 4 CPUs) for guests
    • mixed virtualized and emulated devices
    • Child partitions live snapshots (by Volume Shadow Service integration)
  • At the same time a new wave of virtualization management tools will be released:
    • enterprise leveraged support for thousands of physical and virtual machines (I think he’s referring to the upcoming System Center management product)

Since slides often referred to 3rd parties VMs during the webcast I had the impression Microsoft could start supporting other guest OSes, like Solaris.

On the last Q&A time Mike Neil officially answered the classic HyperThreading question: he said Virtual Server 2005 environments should turn it off until R2.

Egenera BladeFrame System to support Xen Hypervisor

Quoting from the XenSource official announcement:

Egenera Inc., a global leader in utility computing, and XenSource, Inc., the leader in infrastructure-virtualization solutions based on the open source Xen hypervisor, today announced an alliance that will provide enterprise customers with the industry’s most integrated, available and manageable virtualized environment—from CPU to datacenter. Under the terms of the agreement, Egenera and XenSource will support the Xen hypervisor on the Egenera® BladeFrame® product line. Additionally, XenSource will join Egenera’s Accelerate alliance program in order to ensure seamless support of the integrated solution to customers. Combining Xen with the Egenera BladeFrame will enable customers to better utilize today’s ultra-fast processors and manage virtual machines more simply and effectively—enabling server consolidation and decreasing IT costs and administration time.

“We believe that managing virtual resources is the next big battleground in the industry and that Xen is emerging as a key technology for the enterprise,” said Pete Manca, senior vice president of engineering at Egenera. “Our alliance with XenSource gives customers a clear path to creating a totally virtualized environment that is highly available, manageable and secure. The synergy between the Egenera BladeFrame and the open source Xen hypervisor will help customers maximize the utilization of their computing resources and realize the business benefits of true utility computing.”

“With its virtualization of server, storage and network resources, the Egenera BladeFrame is the ideal platform for running Xen,” said Moshe Bar, CTO of XenSource. “Xen is the industry’s choice for virtualization of mission-critical applications in the datacenter, because of its outstanding performance and its adoption as an open industry standard. When running on the Egenera BladeFrame, Xen provides fine-grained control and virtualization of CPU, memory, network and storage resources, enabling CIOs to increase utilization and reduce TCO. This alliance will bring manageable and cost-effective virtual computing to enterprise datacenters worldwide.”

The Egenera BladeFrame system is a new server architecture specifically designed to reduce datacenter complexity and improve business responsiveness. The BladeFrame’s advanced virtualization technology and Egenera PAN Manager software dynamically allocate and repurpose servers to applications as needed without manual intervention. PAN Manager software will interoperate seamlessly with Xen virtualization to provide comprehensive control of the virtualized infrastructure.

Xen is the industry-standard, open source, infrastructure-virtualization software created and maintained by the founders of XenSource, Inc. and developed collaboratively by 20 of the world’s most innovative datacenter solution vendors, including Egenera. Xen allows multiple virtual server instances to run concurrently on the same physical server, with near-native performance and per-virtual-server performance guarantees. The technology is being adopted worldwide in enterprise datacenters to support server consolidation and reduce total cost of ownership. Xen 3.0, to be released shortly, supports up to 32-way SMP workloads as well as 32- and 64-bit processors and Intel® VT-x virtualization technology.

Sun to put VMware virtualization on its Sun Fire and StorEdge

Quoting from Enterprise Networks & Servers:

Sun Microsystems Inc. will deliver VMware’s full line of server virtualization capabilities on Sun’s Sun Fire x64 (x86, 64-bit) servers and the Sun StorEdge 6920 system. In addition, Sun and VMware also signed a technology agreement to provide support for the Solaris 10 Operating System (OS) as a guest OS on future VMware server and desktop products.

As a result of these agreements, Sun will resell the VMware ESX Server, VMware GSX Server and VMware Workstation products, providing customers purchasing Sun Fire x64 servers or workstations from Sun, such as the single- and dual-core Sun Fire V20z and Sun Fire V40z, with the option of adding the virtualization software to their systems.

Sun joins Dell, HP, IBM, NEC and FSC in offering VMware ESX Server on its servers.

VMware ESX Server is virtual infrastructure software for partitioning, consolidating and managing systems in mission- critical environments. With VMware ESX Server on Sun Fire x64 servers and support for the Solaris OS, IT organizations can extend their options to easily provision new services running on the Solaris 10 OS, Windows and standard Linux distribution operating systems on the same piece of hardware, thus helping to increase utilization of the servers.

VMware customers will be able to take advantage of key features of Solaris 10, including Solaris Dynamic Tracing (Dtrace) and Solaris Containers on any architecture. With technology advances such as enhancements to the network stack and special optimizations for multithreaded x64/x86 architectures, Solaris 10 is powering enterprise applications at record speeds on Sun Fire systems. In addition, the Sun StorEdge 6920 system, Sun’s flagship mid-tier storage system, complements VMware ESX Server by enabling customers to implement cost-effective consolidation initiatives and robust business continuity capabilities.

Enterprises in many industries typically run one application service on one server, and often utilize only 5 to 15 percent of their Linux or Windows server hardware capability. With virtual infrastructure, IT organizations can provision new services, change the amount of resources dedicated to a software service easily and consolidate disparate systems.

Books: Virtualization with VMware ESX Server

Virtualization with VMware ESX Server
Release Date: August, 2005
ISBN: 1597490199
Edition: 1
Pages: 608
Size: 9.2″ x 7.0″ x 1.0″

Summary
A virtual evolution in IT organizations throughout the world has begun. It is estimated that currently 3% of all servers run virtually and that number is expected to grow rapidly over the next 5 years. VMware?s ESX server is the enterprise tool that provides the platform on which a complete virtual infrastructure can be designed, implemented, and managed. ESX is the most powerful, resilient and customizable of VMware?s three virtual platforms and this book will explore many of the possibilities that a virtual infrastructure running on ESX Server provides.

Server Sprawl and escalating IT costs have managers and system administrators scrambling to find ways to cut costs and reduce Total Cost of Ownership of their physical infrastructure. Combining software applications onto a single server, even if those applications are from the same software vendor, can be dangerous and problems hard to troubleshoot. VMware? ESX Server allows you to consolidate 15 to 20 or even more servers onto a single physical server reducing hardware, electrical, cooling, and administrative costs. These virtual servers run completely independent of each other so if one crashes the other are not affected.

Planning and implementing a server consolidation is a complex process. This book details the requirements for such a project, includes sample forms and templates, and delivers several physical to virtual migration strategies which will save both time and costs. Readers of this book will easily be able to plan and deploy VMware?s ESX Server and begin down the path of an evolved, virtual infrastructure in which costs, administration overhead, and complexity are reduced.

VMware has provided the technology for a virtual infrastructure and this book shows you how to build it.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 – The Joy of ESX
  • Chapter 2 – Installation
  • Chapter 3 – Configuring a Virtual Machine, Gold Builds, and Clones
  • Chapter 4 – Advanced Configurations
  • Chapter 5 – Virtual Networking
  • Chapter 6 – Physical-to-Virtual Migrations
  • Chapter 7 – Server Consolidation
  • Chapter 8 – Cool Tools for a Virtual Infrastructure
  • Chapter 9 – Administering a Virtual Infrastructure
  • Chapter 10 – Best Practices, Gotchas, and Common Problems
  • Chapter 11 – VMware Under the Covers
  • Chapter 12 – Backup Strategies for ESX Server and Virtual Machines
  • Chapter 13 – Common and Necessary Command-Line Interface (CLI) Commands
  • Chapter 11 – A Peek at the Future: It?s Totally Cool

Intel invests on Virtual Iron

Quoting from InformationWeek:

Virtual Iron Software, which came out of stealth mode last month, finally took the wraps off its channel plans Monday. The company, which develops Windows-based virtualization technologies for the data center, also revealed that Intel Capital has invested $8.5 million in the startup’s third round of venture funding.
While many companies develop software that allows businesses to virtualize servers, storage or applications, Virtual Iron’s technology addresses all of the elements in a data center, including CPUs, memory, I/O, and storage, said Mike Grandinetti, chief marketing for Virtual Iron, of Acton, Mass.

“This gives users the ability to pool those resources as needed,” Grandinetti said. “They can provision servers, networks, and storage automatically without having to touch them. In the past, whether in the mainframe or Unix space, there have been substantial capabilities to manage those resources. We are aimed at the Windows space.”

The investment will help Virtual Iron and Intel work together to develop data center virtualization, said Grandinetti. “It’s rare that Intel announces it is leading a round of funding,” he said. “The funding includes a collaboration agreement. We get access to Intel’s roadmaps, and to technologies like Intel’s VT (Virtualization Technology) chip.”

Lucy McQuilken, investment manager of Intel Capital, said that her company invested in Virtual Iron because of its technology for virtualizing an entire data center, which lets customers balance workloads and increase resource usage, all without the need to purchase excess capacities to meet peak loads. “Our strategy is to invest in companies aligned with [Intel’s] strategic goals,” McQuilken said.

This is not Intel’s first investment in the virtualization industry. Besides developing its Vanderpool virtualization technology for its processors, the company in June also invested in Herndon, Va.-based SWsoft, a developer of technologies to allow multiple virtual servers to share one physical server.

The initial version of the Virtual Iron virtualization platform was released early summer, said Grandinetti. Part of the funding will be used to expand its marketing efforts, which will now include a channel. “We were direct at first, like any early-stage company,” said Grandinetti. “We are now working with application vendors, and are recruiting resellers with data center experience, server and storage virtualization experience or experience in certain markets. A formal reseller program will be rolled out pretty quickly.”

Webcast: Microsoft Virtualization Roadmap

Steven Bink reports this upcoming TechNet webcast from Microsoft, scheduled for Tuesday, October 04, 2005 1:00 PM (GMT-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada):

Today’s information technology organizations are under pressure to reduce costs and prioritize spending on new equipment. Virtualization technology is emerging as an effective way to increase both productivity and deployment flexibility. Virtualization technology can play a key role in uncoupling workloads from server resources and enabling a dynamic and automated datacenter. Microsoft is investing heavily in the next generation of virtualization technology and the management tools that will drive it. This session presents Microsoft’s virtualization roadmap and strategy, starting with Microsoft Virtual Server 2005. We then discuss the Windows hypervisor technology, which will be incorporated into the next release of Microsoft Windows Server.

Presenter: Mike Neil, Product Unit Manager, Microsoft Corporation

Mike Neil is the product unit manager of the Microsoft Windows Virtualization team. His team is responsible for Microsoft Virtual PC, Microsoft Virtual Server and the next-generation Windows virtualization technology. He joined Microsoft with the acquisition of Connectix, where he was vice president of engineering

The webcast will be 1 hour long, in English language only. It’s considered a Level 300 session. You can register for free here.

I surely will attend, hoping more details about Microsoft hypervisor and next Virtual Server will be disclosed.

VMware Workstation 5.5 to be released: RC1 available

Today VMware released the new 16958 build, labelled Release Candidate 1.

With this new phase VMware re-introduce the brand new, cool feature, introduced in beta1 and dropped in beta2, called VMware Player:

VMware Player is a utility that opens and plays VMware Workstation 4 and Workstation 5 virtual machines. On Windows hosts, the player also opens and plays Microsoft Virtual PC and Virtual Server virtual machines and Symantec LiveState Recovery system images. VMware Player makes your VMware virtual machines accessible to colleagues, partners, customers, and clients who do not own VMware products.

The VMware Player is probably one of the most wanted feature by every VMware customer: it will be able to run a single, non-editable VM at a time, without installing all Workstation product.
This new opportunity will be mostly interesting for any salesman or teacher or conference speaker in need of a fast and non-invasive way to run VMs.
The VMware Player could also be the perfect companion of the new USB keys with U3 platform, covered in a previous post.

The build is still available for whole public. Download it here: http://www.vmware.com/programs/1/wkst5beta.do