The Xen open source hypervisor, powering Citrix XenServer, Virtual Iron and the upcoming Sun xVM Server, reached version 3.2.1.
The new minor release is just for bug fixing. Download it here.
Virtual machines, containers, functions. Market knowledge for IT decision makers since 2003
The Xen open source hypervisor, powering Citrix XenServer, Virtual Iron and the upcoming Sun xVM Server, reached version 3.2.1.
The new minor release is just for bug fixing. Download it here.
VMware releases today a small update for its Mac OS product Fusion.
The new 1.1.2 version (build 87978) fixes some bugs (a couple related to the Mac Book Air) and introduces support for Windows XP Service Pack 3 Boot Camp partitions.
Additionally, the Fusion virtual machines can now be saved with the Mac OS X 10.5 Time Machine.
Download a trial here.
In mid March Citrix announced an OEM agreement with Lenovo to distribute XenServer in China. Now VMware does exactly the same.
Lenovo will start distributing its servers with VMware Infrastructure 3.5 pre-installed immediately.
The VMware entrance in the Apple market in August 2007 doesn’t seem to have damaged Parallels business too much.
The company in fact reports over one million Parallels Desktops copies sold worldwide.
Unfortunately Parallels doesn’t reveal how its sales trend is these days, and in which countries the product is more popular than VMware Fusion.
In any case the market may be big enough for both: the third big, Microsoft, decided to discontinue its Virtual PC for Mac in August 2006. Who knows how many executives regret for the choice after seeing the Parallels results?
October 14-16, 2008, in London, virtualization.info will open its first conference about virtualization technologies: the Virtualization Congress 2008.
The Early Bird (£ 200 discount) will end April 30, and before that time we wanted to give our readers an insightful update about the progresses made so far.
Well, the support we are getting from the industry is simply impressive.
Since day one we were able to announce that the biggest market players, VMware, Citrix and Microsoft, are with us as Platinum sponsors.
With them other emerging stars supported the Virtualization Congress since the beginning: Quest, ManageIQ, Marathon Technologies, Veeam and VMLogix.
In less than two months since that day, we received a remarkable number of inquiries and we are glad to announce another round of great sponsors: HP, Phoenix Technologies, Vizioncore, Transitive, eG Innovations, IGEL Technology, Metron.
Unfortunately we cannot disclose the names of many others since they are signing in these hours but check back the Sponsors list to see who else is coming.
Obviously we don’t have only top sponsors. A great conference is made by great speakers.
The agenda is still secret, but we can reveal the first three names:
Other top-level technical speakers are coming, along with some exceptional guest stars. We have new announcements in queue.
Another factor that makes a conference a better happening is the surprise element: our Call for Startups competition received several applications from stealth companies and we should be able to show something completely new on stage this October.
Hopefully this is a good start to make the Virtualzation Congress a great event to attend, but just in case we have much more coming. Stay tuned!
The Early Bird (£ 200 discount) ends in one week! Register now!
Today VMware announced the Q1 2008 financial results, beating analysts forecasts with a 69% sales increase.
The immediate result was a 15% increase in VMW trading during the last part of the day.
VMware expects another 55% revenue increase for Q2 2008, but the most interesting information is related to the increased spending: the company investments in R&D doubled in the last quarter while the sales & marketing investments topped a 72% increase as reported by Bloomberg.
Update: Seeking Alpha published the whole earnings call transcript. It’s available here.
Just yesterday virtualization.info covered the launch of a peculiar startup in the VDI space: Desktone.
The company has yet to disclose which service providers will use their technology, but it seems that the first will be one of the biggest phone carrier in US: Verizon.
virtualization.info received a confirmation that Verizon will offer hosted virtual desktops to its customers, despite nor the price (rumored at $75 / month) neither the launch date were disclosed.
Desktone will split the revenue with the phone carrier.
Another missing information is which back-end virtualization infrastructure will be used by the service provider: Desktone claimed support for VMware ESX only in the first release, but its architecture is able to integrate both Citrix and Microsoft hypervisors.
If Verizon wants to adopt a different virtualization platform it should be easy for Desktone to satisfy the requirement.
In any case this may become the biggest VDI case study existing today.
After securing $12 million in a second round of investments, the Canadian company CiRBA is back with a minor update of its capacity planning tool Data Center Intelligence (DCI).
Despite the number assignment DCI 4.6 has some major new features like:
The virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Roadmap has been updated accordingly.
Andrew Kutz had time to do serious reverse engineering, spot security risks, and produce an impressive number of plug-ins before VMware released the official documentation to achieve the goal.
The guide is very brief (13 pages) but addresses the fundamentals behind the new plug-in architecture.
Along with the document VMware also released the XML Schema Definition to create new plug-ins.
Read it here.
AMD is finally able to deliver its codename Barcellona quad-core CPU (the first OEM to distribute them is Dell) and announces that VMware certified it for ESX and ESXi.
AMD Opteron Quad-Core introduces the nested tables technology called Rapid Virtualization Indexing (RVI) which is expected to greatly improve guest OS performances.
VMware supports it starting from ESX 3.5.0.