Invirtus officially confirms its acquisition by Quest

Invirtus acquisition by Quest remained stealth until June 2007, when finally emerged online. Despite that nor Quest neither Invirtus ever confirmed.

No official press releases has been released so far but now Invirtus company profile on official website clearly exposes the news (and real acquisition period):

In early 2007 Quest Software, Inc. acquired Invirtus in order to expand its product portfolio of virtualization infrastructure management solutions. The virtualization management technologies from Invirtus support that objective, by helping enterprises maximize their virtualization investment, whether based on Microsoft, VMware or Virtual Iron platforms…

After acquisition Quest started to work on Invirtus strategy, first allowing Scott Herold to move from its other virtualization company Vizioncore, and then arranging an OEM partnership between two subsidiaries.

NetApp tightens partnership with VMware

Quoting from the NetApp official announcement:

Network Appliance, Inc., a leading provider of storage and data management solutions, announced today that it has strengthened its relationship with VMware, the global leader in software for industry-standard virtualized desktops and servers, to collaborate on joint engineering, marketing, service, and support.

The NetApp-VMware relationship is designed to enable the two companies to work on joint engineering solutions for advanced application mobility, backup and recovery, and disaster recovery.

NetApp and VMware joint engineering projects are also targeted at further simplifying disaster recovery, streamlining test and development environments, optimizing storage utilization of virtual desktop consolidations, and ultimately creating a tightly integrated server-to-storage virtualization solution that makes next-generation data management real and affordable for the enterprise…

NetApp cooperation with VMware on disaster recovery is not too surprising, now that VMware admitted it’s working on a disaster recovery solution.

AMD announces virtualization vendors support for quad-core Barcellona

Quoting from the AMD official announcement:

AMD today announced that leading x86 operating system (OS) and virtual infrastructure (VI) vendors are embracing support for AMD’s native Quad-Core AMD Opteron processor, code-named “Barcelona.” Microsoft, Novell, Red Hat, Sun Microsystems and VMware are optimizing their operating systems, virtual infrastructures and supporting tools and middleware to take full advantage of the increased efficiencies, performance and decreased power consumption enabled by AMD quad-core technology.

Microsoft Windows Server, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server from Novell, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Sun Microsystems’ Solaris Operating System and VMware Infrastructure are expected to offer versions of their industry-leading operating systems and virtual infrastructures that work out-of-the-box with “Barcelona”, the industry’s first native x86 quad-core processors, providing improved performance across a range of applications. “Barcelona’s” enhancements, which will offer increased application performance within the same platform and power envelope as existing dual-core processors, include native quad-core capabilities, Enhanced AMD PowerNow! technology and Rapid Virtualization Indexing (formally “Nested Paging”), which is a new feature of AMD Virtualization technology.

VMware will support new AMD Rapid Virtualization Indexing since upcoming ESX Server 3.1, now in private beta.

Massimo Re Ferrè, Architect at IBM, posted a long and interesting comment on how this technology will impact virtualization. Read it here.

Qumranet will unveil its first product by the end of September

Quoting from ZDNet:

At the San Francisco, Calif. conference this week, Qumranet, a Santa Clara, Calif-based commercial startup that funds KVM, told ZDNet that the company’s first product will be unveiled in late September and will ship in the fourth quarter.

It won’t be a knock off of rival XenSource’s XenEnterprise. Because it leverages the KVM support in the Linux kernel, the new offering can focus on advanced services such as storage virtualization, hinted Qumranet co-founder, president and vice president of R&D, Rami Tamir.

Tamir offered up some fightin0 words. “Being latecomer is an advantage,” Tamir claimed, then lowered the volume of his voice. “Xen is going away.”

Following a conference session detailing the merits of Xen and KVM, Qumranet’s Tamir acknowledged that several efforts are underway to enable interoperability. He noted that while one IBM programmer is working on code to add para virtualization features to KVM, and thus make it more competitive with Xen, still others at IBM are developing a CIM-based module that will ensure both engines will be supported and managed according to industry accepted management standards.

By his estimation, it’s inevitable that Xen and KVM are headed for war but he was skeptical about interoperability promises, Rosenblum told ZDNet.

“There will be a battle of open source virtualization engines,” he said. “I think one of the issue for both [Xen and KVM] is that current hardware support for virtualization doesn’t recurse very well so if you try to run KVM inside Xen virtual machine it doesn’t work and I don’t think it’ll work soon with any kind of acceptable performance. Obviously, on the same box you probably are not deploying both technologies.”…

Read the whole article at source.

Veeam to release a disaster recovery solution

Quoting from Enterprise IT Planet:

The founders of Veeam, Timashev and his partner, CTO and co-founder Andrei Baronov, are betting that’s leaving them room to replicate the success they both had with the previous company they founded, Aelita Software. Aelita provided Windows NT and Microsoft infrastructure systems management tools, managing about 5 million Windows NT to Active Directory users before it was sold to Quest Software for $150 million in 2004. As it did with Microsoft, Veeam says it is working with VMware as a partner rather than a competitor.

It’s planning to also shortly release a product designed for backing up virtual environments. After server consolidation, back up ranks high on organizations’ reasons for going virtual, but, says Timashev, it has to get much better for people to start using virtualization for the purposes of high availability and quick recovery…

Read the whole article at source.

Like other vendors Veeam may have problems marketing such solution, now that VMware leaked is working on its own disaster recovery solution.

SWsoft announces H1 2007 results

Quoting from the SWsoft official announcement:

Driven by growing acceptance of its Parallels virtual machine software and Virtuozzo operating system (OS) virtualization software, SWsoft today announced that its revenues grew by 127 percent for the first half of the year versus the first half of the previous year.

SWsoft, currently the world’s second-largest overall virtualization software company, leading desktop virtualization vendor and the only company to offer both virtual machine and OS virtualization technologies, reported revenues from its virtualization products surged 312 percent, as compared with the first half of last year.

The company’s revenues related to consumers, SMBs and enterprises (excluding hosting providers) grew by a remarkable 487 percent over the same period and now represent 56 percent of the company’s total revenues (based on the past three months)…

Veeam appoints Carrie Reber as Vice President of Marketing

Quoting from the Veeam official announcement:

Veeam Software, an innovative provider of software for managing virtual servers, has added Carrie Reber to its executive team as vice president, worldwide marketing.

Most recently, she was director of product public relations and analyst relations for Quest Software. Reber joined Quest through its 2004 acquisition of Aelita Software. During her tenure at Aelita, the company was ranked in the top 100 of the Inc. 500 list, won numerous awards, and became well known for Windows Server management solutions. Earlier, she gained targeted visibility for companies including NetMap Analytics, Macola Software, Optimum Technology, Legent Corp. and CompuServe. Reber’s experience also includes work for the technology division of a Dallas-based advertising and public relations agency…

Ms. Reber is not the first executive leaving Quest for Veeam: before her George Sidoris, which was appointed as Vice President of Sales.

Even before Andrei Baronow, which co-founded Veeam with Ratmir Timashev.

VMware will release a disaster recovery solution

In its IPO roadshow webcast to investors, VMware President Diane Greene doesn’t only expose company vision (suggesting that VMware may want to port its hypervisor on non-x86 architectures), but also reveals a major upcoming product:

…We have not even deployed a solution for disaster recovery yet. We want the best disaster recovery product of the entire world…

Such solution may appear as a stand alone product, or as an additional module for VMware flagship product. In this second case it would be the killer feature to present with next ESX Server 4.0, which may be out in June 2008, accordingly to VMware software lifecycle.

Note that such move would further extend company competition against its own partners, like Vizioncore, which addresses disaster recovery issues in VMware environments since ever, and PlateSpin which is applying its P2V technology for disaster recovery purposes since some time.

Is VMware working to port its hypervisor on non-x86 architectures?

A major detail went almost unnotice in roadshow webcast VMware presented to its investors before IPO.

Describing corporate strategy, VMware President Diane Greene talks about bringing the company to a completely new level while related slide about VMware vision discloses a critical statement:

Virtualization for any OS, any hardware, any form factor.

Any hardware, any form factor seems more than a simple reference to upcoming ESX Server 3.1 hardware appliance VMware is developing with Dell, IBM and other vendors.

Is the company working to port its hypervisor to multiple architectures (including mobile ones) to achieve unprecedented software portability?