Review: InfoWorld reviews IBM System x x3550

InfoWorld published a brief review of a new IBM x3550 server, focusing on virtualization. It received a score of 8.4/10 (Very Good) and providing this bottom line:

The System x3550 marks a definitive step forward in IBM’s march toward commodity-server virtualization, offering a system tuned to the needs of a virtual environment, coupled with high-level management tools integrated into its Director product. The server, not without it’s share of IBM design quirks, performed well in the lab.

If you are planning to use this machine for virtualization may worth take a look.

VMware to offer host OS support for Sun Solaris 10

A small note in an eWeek article about upcoming support for Xen reveals the great news:

Sun is preparing to release to OpenSolaris sometime in July a snapshot of code that will run on top of Xen and which provides Dom0 (Domain zero) support using Solaris Dom0, which supports 32-bit and 64-bit Linux and Solaris DomU’s, said Tim Marsland, Sun’s CTO of operating platforms, at a media briefing on virtualization at Sun’s San Francisco offices June 27.

Sun was also seeing a lot of adoption of the VMware virtualization technology by its Solaris customers, and is working with VMware to make sure its products run on Sun’s platforms.

Read the whole article at source.

The news, if true, would be significant not only for the extended host OS support, which is always welcomed.
Having both VMware and Xen virtualization capabilities, along with its native OS partitioning technology, Solaris Zones, being fully supported on x86 architectures, being completely free also for commercial uses, and featuring an innovative file system, ZFS, Solaris 10 would possibly represent the best virtualization platform ever.

SWsoft pushes Virtuozzo sells improving its channel

Quoting from the SWsoft official announcement:

SWsoft, the leading provider of operating system virtualization and automation, today announced the SWsoft Partner Network to qualify and reward channel partners that sell the Virtuozzo virtualization products. Members of the SWsoft Partner Network receive product discounts, sales leads, market development funds, discounts on training and access to the SWsoft partner portal resources.

Today’s announcement follows a month-long pilot program with some 20 partners from around the world who have already joined…

HP launches Integrity Virtual Machine

Quoting from the HP official announcement:


For customers that are concerned about the availability of their mission-critical UNIX® environments when they consolidate using virtualization, HP has further integrated HP Serviceguard for HP-UX 11i with HP Integrity Virtual Machines.
Available now with the latest release of HP Serviceguard, this functionality helps guard against failure by automatically moving the virtual machines between servers in a VSE. HP Integrity Virtual Machines also now enables easy manual migration of virtual machines, accelerating application qualification and deployment…

Unisys bringing virtualization on its mainframes in 2007

Quoting from SearchDataCenter:

In addition to the ClearPath update, Unisys announced plans for its roadmap through 2007. The company said it will be exiting the custom CMOS business — currently used in its ClearPath products — and plans to run all of its hardware on Intel Corp.’s Xeon and Itanium offerings.

In addition to committing to Intel, Unisys is rolling out its own hypervisor next year. The Unisys virtualization software will allow users to run Windows, Linux, MCP and OS2200 on a single partition.

Read the whole article at source.

Sharing out Enterprises and SMBs virtualization market

Bob Roudebush wrote an interesting post about how the virtualization market is seeing the raise of large influence blocks.

I already wrote something about this evolution in The virtualization market towards monopoly? post.
I now would add some comments on Bob’s post, just focusing on the two biggest competitors.

First of all it’s mandatory to recognize what happens depending on target audience and target usage: enterprises and SMBs, production and development / test.

What enterprises choose today for production? Having no serious alternatives it’s quite evidente they are going for VMware ESX Server + VirtualCenter.

What SMBs prefer for production? Usually the cheapest solution. Here both Microsoft Virtual Server and upcoming VMware Server are valid choices being both free.

What enterprises choose for development / test? It’s likely they want to streamline the virtual machine usage lifecycle and respend existing know-how. At today only VMware can grant the same virtual machine to be re-used in every product of its offering. So having VMware in production would lead companies to prefer same virtualization vendor for all uses.

What SMBs choose for development / test? Small companies have less complex environments and a less rationalized use of virtualization. So decision more likely depends on solution price and capability to integrate with other adopted technologies. Being Microsoft a pervasive presence in the SMB market, today more than ever with Express product line, it’s easy Virtual Server is the product of choice.

Now, imagining for a moment Microsoft answer to VMware Virtual Infrastructure 3, Windows Server Virtualization and Virtual Machine Manager, is available today and is embedded for free inside every new Windows OS out there, we could see a neat scenario.

Even considering Microsoft WSV an enteprise-class high quality product for free, able to compete with ESX Server, companies already adopted VMware in production would hardly decide to break compatibility and adopt WSV for development. So the enteprise market is safe, at least at beginning, for VMware.

On the other side, SMBs suddenly find it’s usual operating system of preference, Windows, including an enterprise-class virtualization solution, available at no additional costs, working with all adopted technologies, from Active Directory to WSUS, from MOM to SMS, good enough to be used both in production and in development / test.

It’s easy to imagine Microsoft could grab the whole SMB market in no time, with a marketing message not focused on technical competition, but on something like our solution is already there.

Unfortunately for Microsoft they are still 2 years away from that opportunity, a time VMware can exploit for distributing its Server as much as possible, and urging small companies to extensively adopt it.

The faster VMware will move SMBs on its virtualization platform the stronger will be its position, making harder for Microsoft penetrating the market.
And while the Ultimate Virtual Appliance Challenge it’s a nice try in this direction, the best way to accelerate the process is to give away, for free, a valuable physical to virtual (P2V) solution.

Surgient announces Mercury Verified Integration

Quoting from the Surgient official announcement:

Surgient, the leader in virtual lab management applications for automating software demo, test and training labs, announced today that integration between Surgient Virtual QA/Test Lab Management System (VQMS) and Mercury Quality Center™ has been validated by Mercury Interactive Corporation, the global leader in business technology optimization (BTO) software. Surgient has also been promoted to Premier level of the Mercury Alliance Program.

The integration of Surgient’s virtual lab management application with Mercury Quality Center allows customers to accelerate their software test cycles by automating the provisioning and configuration of test infrastructure used for software testing…

New competitor for VMware emerges

As soon as the desktop virtualization technology becomes more popular several companies approach it, offering solutions going to compete with wide known products like VMware Workstation and Player.
Since the advent of hardware-aided virtualization by AMD and Intel this task became easier so it’s likely a growing number of competitors will appear.

The last company arrived on the market is Sentellion, launching these days vThere.

The solution’s architecture seems to mimic one offered by VMware ACE, providing a tool for creating virtual machines, a player to run them on any host OS in the company, and a management tool.
Plus vThere puts accent on authentication, featuring a directory services (like Active Directory) powered logging in system.

The price is composed by Player and Image Creator license. The first one is reported to cost $495 dollars / user while the second costs $10,000.

At the time of writing there is no trial to download.

VMware to create a virtual appliances marketplace

Quoting from Billy Marshall blog:

VMware held its industry analyst day this past week in Boston at the Charles Hotel. I was invited to speak on a panel about virtual appliances, and I was pleasantly suprised by how aggressively VMware is embracing the concept of virtual appliances.

Diane Greene and Brian Byun gave a presentation that described virtual appliances as one of three strategic pillars for the company. As part of the panel presentation on virtual appliances, Srinivas Krishnamurti proclaimed that VMware intends to create a marketplace for virtual appliances on VMTN…

Read the whole article at source.