VMware wins Network Computing Well-Connected Award

Quoting from the VMware official announcement:

VMware, Inc., the global leader in virtual infrastructure software for industry-standard systems, today announced that VMware GSX Server has won Network Computing’s 12th Annual Well-Connected award, taking top honors in the Virtual Machine Software category.

VMware GSX Server, first introduced five years ago, enables users to quickly provision new server capacity by partitioning a physical Windows or Linux server into multiple virtual machines. The successor to VMware GSX
Server is the recently-introduced, feature-packed, entry-level VMware Server.

VMware Server is the first commercially available server virtualization product with support for 64-bit virtual machines and support for Intel Virtualization Technology. In addition, VMware Server supports Virtual SMP, a technology that enables single virtual machine to span multiple physical processors…

Wikipedia reviewers censor virtualization.info

I’m very sorry to soil this technical blog with a polemic, but there are things I dislike and I think should be mentioned.

As you know Wikipedia, autodeclared The Free Encyclopedia, offers an impressive amount of informations on an impressive amount of topics.
Everybody can start writing a new topic, expand or correct an existing. There is also a chance to add, for every topic, one or more external links, which users consider relevants for who’s reading.

To avoid an uncontrolled amount of spam Wikipedia not only counts on the occasional readers’ contribute but also on a certain amount of volunteer users, which act as reviewers, sistematically analyzing pages modifications and removing undesired contents.
Since Wikipedia is autodeclared free, meaning that everybody is free to contribute, removing an added content should be accepted just when it represent spam or an evident error.

I, probably not so humbly, consider virtualization.info (which exists and covers modern virtualization since much before the world turned its head on and started to keep interested), the Virtualization Industry Roadmap and the What is Virtualization webcast relevant for every virtualization topic.
So several months ago, like others bloggers and vendors, proceeded to add these 3 entries in many Wikipedia virtualization topics, as External Links. I acted in good faith, thought and still think it’s a good idea.

A week ago two different users, in two different moments, deleted my three entries from everywhere, evaluating virtualization.info mentioned contents as spam.
Users are Wmahan and Discospinster.

I received a message from the last one, while trying to re-add my contents, explaining me that Wikipedia is not a place to post your own website or spam contents but that I was free to add more to the topic.

Now I have two problems, which I exposed as questions:

  • if the reviewers would take just few minutes to analyze links I added as External Links they would agree virtualization.info contents are value-added contents and not spam. Unless they think to have a better judgement capability of 100,000 users / month…
  • in some cases my links have been deleted while others, even identical in name, are still there.
    I’m talking in particular of the link to What is Virtualization: mine has been deleted while the others provided by ZDnet or KernelLinux are still there, for example in the topic Virtualization

Why? I immediately thought is was depending on advertising which is present on this blog, but after a fast check I found both contents saved from censorship have same or even more amount of advertising.
So what is the criteria? Have I the right to ask and receive an answer?

The last reviewer answered me in the following way:

These links were taken off the articles because they weren’t directly related to the subject. Most of the articles were about specific brands of virtualization technology, so the external links were specific as well. However, in the general article Virtual Machine, the link to the blog is relevant.

This answer has 3 problems:

  • doesn’t answer the question why similar contents (in some cases with same name) are still there and mine were removed.
  • What is Virtualization webcast seems to me a content pertinent enough to both the Virtual Machine topic and the Virtualization topic, it’s not available in any
  • the Virtualization Industry Roadmap seems to me pertinent enough with any virtualization topic, including Wikipedia pages talking about virtualization vendors

I asked further explainations but received any.

So the question now is: Wikipedia is really free? Reviewers are really competent on whay they edit?
Nicholas Carr recently expressed a very interesting opinion on this.

At the end of the story virtualization.info is still not present in Wikipedia (I refuse to re-add links until I receive a satisfactory explaination for censorship) and I personally changed my opinion on the project, considering what happend to virtualization topics could happen to every listed topic, influencing users interests in every way but free.

Update: the discussion greatly continued on this post comments, so I suggest you to read them, before further reading.

One or more passionate virtualization.info readers, after reading this post, re-added my links to the Virtualization topic but, once again, the mentioned censors (Wmahan in this case) removed the link:

Your opinion about the site’s relevance would be more credible if it didn’t appear to be self-promotion. Your actions make it difficult to assume you take a netural point of view: you added links to many articles, you added multiple links within a single article, and you didn’t contribute any new information on the subject, as far as I can tell.

If you have a vested interest in the site, it might be better to wait and let someone else add links to it, if they find it relevant.

Also, you said above that the virtualization articles “are incomplete or totally missing.” Any help you can provide in improving the articles is welcome. — Wmahan. 18:11, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
Now User:XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX is continuing to add links to virtualization.info without discussion.

Now this thing is going comic:

  • This time I didn’t add links from myself but someone else did for me (even if the submitting IP address is the same this doesn’t mean I’m the submitter…).
    Why if someone else, from my same network, add links pointing to my site I am still not credible?
  • Why I have to add contents to articles in exchange of placing External Links? Others external links provideds did it? What if (and this is exactly the case of Virtualization Industry Roadmap) I believe my contents are valuable and pertinent but cannot fit inside the article itself?

The main point reviewers still have to argue is not why I’m not allowed to post (which is debatable), but why I’ve been removed while others are still there.

Whitepaper: Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 Development and Debugging

Microsoft released a very focused 71-pages whitepaper for using its desktop virtualization product, Virtual PC 2004, for development work:

Microsoft Virtual PC offers many features to facilitate the software development process. By using Virtual PC to create a valid representation of an end-user machine, developers can test application changes on virtual end-user machines instead of on the developer’s physical machine. This helps to mitigate the “works on my machine” syndrome, thus reducing overall development and test cycle times. Fixing a bug before it goes to the testing group is much faster than fixing it after testers detect it.

Read it here.

VMware Ultimate Virtual Appliance Challenge submission phase is closed

Three months ago VMware launched an incredible challenge to the IT communities world: create the best virtual appliance ever and win up to $100,000.

The deadline for send your creations, May 26th 11:59 PM PST, is now over.

Submitted virtual appliances will now start appearing in the Virtual Appliances Directory where the whole community will be able to download and rate them (and discuss them in VMTN Forums).

The thrill will stay for another 2,5 months, until August 14th when the prestigious judging panel will reveal winners.

Stay tuned on virtualization.info for a review of most exciting virtual appliances!

Mandriva Corporate Server 4.0 to include OpenVZ

Quoting from the OpenVZ official announcement:

Mandriva, the publisher of the popular Mandriva Linux operating system, and the OpenVZ project today announced that the OpenVZ operating system virtualization software will be included as part of the Mandriva Corporate Server 4.0.

We are pleased to offer OpenVZ as a standard component in the Mandriva Corporate Server 4.0 toolbox to simplify production management and maximize hardware usage,” said David Barth, CTO at Mandriva.

“Embedding the OpenVZ technology directly into the Mandriva kernel will give Mandriva customers unparalleled virtualization functionality,” said Kir Kolyshkin, manager of the OpenVZ project…

Register for the beta here.

The virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Roadmap has been updated accordingly.

Whitepaper: Installing Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 on Windows Small Business Server 2003 SP1

Microsoft released a very interesting paper, solving a typical question of small companies looking for effordable solutions: Can I use Virtual Server within my Windows SBS?

Does your small business face any of these issues?

  • Your business applications require dedicated servers, but you only have one server
  • Your business applications are incompatible with the current version of Windows Small Business Server 2003 (Windows SBS)
  • You want to provide Terminal Services capabilities without compromising security

With Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 running on Windows SBS, you can solve all of these issues, without costly hardware expenditures. Use Virtual Server to create virtual machines, which run on the same physical server as Windows SBS.
Then, run your Windows applications on the virtual machines—including legacy applications or applications that require a dedicated server—in their native Windows environments (including Windows NT). Applications and services run on the virtual machine just as they do on physical servers, with few limitations.

Read it here.

BMC Virtualizer wins Network Computing Well-Connected Award

Quoting from the BMC Software official announcement:

BMC Software today announced that the BMC Virtualizer solution has won a CMP Media LLC’s Network Computing 2006 Well-Connected Award. BMC Virtualizer outperformed the competition in the category of Network Infrastructure: Virtual Manager.

The first policy-based automated virtualization solution, BMC Virtualizer helps to deliver higher levels of application availability, reduce costs and achieve data center consolidation for enterprise IT environments with large and growing multi-server clusters. This solution provides an alternative to static server over-provisioning with dynamic, policy-based provisioning to meet rapidly changing user demands.

BMC Virtualizer automatically provisions appropriate server resources – whether physical or virtual – for applications based on business need and enables the sharing of the server resources across multiple applications. The solution eliminates 1:1 server failover requirements by managing a smaller pool of shared failover servers. This automates application server failover and recovery in less than five minutes…

Book: Advanced Server Virtualization: VMware and Microsoft Platforms in the Virtual Data Center

Advanced Server Virtualization
Release Date: May 17, 2005
ISBN: 0849339316
Edition: 1
Pages: 760

Summary
With practical guidelines and examples, Advanced Server Virtualization emphasizes design, implementation, and management from both a technical and consultative point of view. This book presents step-by-step guidelines for planning, deployment, installing, configuring, and creating virtual servers. Covering Microsoft Virtual Server and VMware, it addresses platform-specific virtualization features such as virtual machines, hard drives, networking, and resource management. It offers best practices that allow users to avoid common pitfalls and achieve quicker success in server virtualization implementation. It also discusses software licensing issues and the cost-benefits of deploying virtual servers.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 – Introduction to Server Virtualization
  • Chapter 2 – Types of Server Virtualization Technologies
  • Chapter 3 – Server Virtualization Concepts
  • Chapter 4 – Business Cases for Server Virtualization
  • Chapter 5 – Other Uses of Server Virtualization
  • Chapter 6 – Planning for Deployment
  • Chapter 7 – Server Virtualization Platform Differences
  • Chapter 8 – The Microsoft Virtual Server Platform
  • Chapter 9 – Installing Microsoft Virtual Server
  • Chapter 10 – Configuring Microsoft Virtual Server
  • Chapter 11 – Creating a Microsoft Virtual Server Virtual Machine
  • Chapter 12 – Microsoft Virtual Server Advanced Topics
  • Chapter 13 – The VMware ESX Server Platform
  • Chapter 14 – Installing VMware ESX Server
  • Chapter 15 – Configuring VMware ESX Server
  • Chapter 16 – Creating a VMware ESX Server Virtual Machine
  • Chapter 17 – VMware ESX Server Advanced Topics
  • Chapter 18 – The VMware GSX Server Platform
  • Chapter 19 – Installing VMware GSX Server
  • Chapter 20 – Configuring VMware GSX Server
  • Chapter 21 – Creating a VMware GSX Server Virtual Machine
  • Chapter 22 – VMware GSX Server Advanced Topics
  • Chapter 23 – Upgrading VMware GSX Server and ESX Server
  • Chapter 24 – Guest Operating System Techniques
  • Chapter 25 – Scripting with Microsoft Virtual Server, VMware GSX Server and VMware ESX Server
  • Chapter 26 – Other Advanced Topics
  • Chapter 27 – Tools and Utilities
  • Chapter 28 – Related Products and Open Source Projects
  • Chapter 29 – Other Virtualization Resources

Abouth the Authors
David Marshall is a senior architect at Surgient, the leading provider of virtual lab applications for automating software testing, training, and demo labs. He is also the editor of the Infoworld Virtualization Report (weblog.infoworld.com/virtualization/) and the virtualization news blog, VMBlog.com. Marshall is a Microsoft Certified Professional and holds additional certifications from CompTIA and others. He has extensive experience architecting, deploying and managing complex virtual infrastructure environments for a variety of Fortune 1000 clients over the past six years. Prior to joining Surgient, Marshall was employed by ProTier, an early virtualization service provider acquired by Surgient in 2003, and by BankOne. Marshall holds a B.S. in Finance and Information Technology Certification from the University of New Orleans.

Wade A. Reynolds is a senior architect at Surgient, the leading provider of virtual lab applications for automating software testing, training and demo labs. Reynolds is a Microsoft Certified Professional and specializes in designing and implementing enterprise solutions using virtual infrastructure technology including VMware ESX Server and Microsoft Virtual Server. Reynolds has several years of experience in the architecture, deployment, and troubleshooting of small to large scale advanced server virtualization solutions for many prestigious clients. Reynolds has software development, database design, network engineering and systems integration experience developed at companies such as SCP Pool Corporation and General Electric. He currently lives in Austin, Texas.

Dave McCrory currently works as an expert in Enterprise Data Center Virtualization and Hosting Technologies. McCrory has been granted two US Patents and has five others pending, all based on Data Center Management and Virtualization technologies. He has worked with Microsoft Virtual Server in its Alpha state as well as with its predecessor, Connectix Virtual Server. While working with these products, he provided these companies with assistance on the original designs. Additionally, he also was the first successful Alpha site for VMware ESX Server. Previously, he has also worked as a consultant for both Sprint and General Electric. McCrory also founded ProTier, a startup company that wrote virtualization management software that was later acquired by Surgient. He has also attained Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer, Master Certified Netware Engineer, and Citrix Certified Administrator certifications.