Microsoft opens Windows Server Virtualization TAP program

James O’Neill, IT Professional Evangelist at Microsoft, published on his corporate blog opening of Technology Adoption Program (TAP) for Windows Server Virtualization (codename Viridian):

On Friday the Windows Server virtualization (WSv) team opened nominations for the Technology Adoption Programme (TAP) for Windows Server virtualization aka Viridian. The nomination process closes on May 16th.

I should explain that a TAP is designed to be an opportunity for collaboration between customers and Microsoft to validate a new product. This is achieved through product feedback as a result of deployment of pre-release builds in non-production and production environments. Customers have an opportunity to validate the design and direction of the technology, through discovery of bugs and by submitting Design Change Requests (DCR’s) for the product development team to consider.

The WSv TAP is distinct from any other Microsoft TAP – although it has links with the longhorn server TAP. The WSv TAP is not a marketing or relationship programme: it is strictly an engineering validation programme focused on scenario testing and bug discovery/submission. There are a limited number of places and it is expected to be over-subscribed – nomination does not guarantee acceptance. Participants will be selected to get the mix of characteristics (planned deployments, LHS experience, location, technology, scenario coverage, etc.) needed by the product team.

Participating in any TAP requires a significant level of commitment. The nomination questionnaire, will ask for likely deployment scenarios. If accepted, it is expected that the customer commit to these deployment scenarios. In addition, Microsoft asks that participants test, deploy, and provide timely product feedback for each of the major milestone releases; TAP Participants get 24×7 production support for these releases. Other builds may be be provided for non-production use only and support will not be provided.

To adhere this TAP program contact James O’Neil directly.

IBM to adopt Transitive technology in upcoming System p Application Virtual Environment

IBM just announced a new feature in its System p machines able to run unmodified x86 32-bit Linux binaries.

To do that IBM is using Transitive technology, QuickTransit, already popular for allowing execution of Sun SPARC binaries on x86 architectures.

Quoting from Transitive official announcement:

Transitive Corporation, the leading provider of software that enables transportability of applications across multiple processor and operating system (OS) pairs, today announced that its innovative QuickTransit technology is being deployed on IBM System p™ servers, allowing IBM customers to run thousands of native Linux/x86 applications on IBM’s POWER-based servers running Linux . A beta version of the software, named IBM System p Application Virtual Environment (System p AVE), was released this month by IBM.

Transitive’s QuickTransit technology serves as the foundation for IBM System p AVE, which is designed to enable Linux/x86 applications to be consolidated with AIX 5L™ and Linux on POWER applications on a single server, thus significantly expanding the software ecosystem for IBM System p servers, and saving software developers valuable time and resources to support the System p architecture…

As Mark Cathcart, Distinguished Engineer at IBM, reveals on his personal blog, IBM plans to release this technology in H2 2007.

Enroll for the IBM System p Application Virtual Environment (pAVE) here.

Tech: Using Windows Vista BitLocker to encrypt virtual machines

Ben Armstrong, Microsoft Virtual Machines Team Program Manager at Microsoft, published a very interesting article explaining how to encrypt a Virtual PC / Virtual Server virtual machine using BitLocker technlogy introduced in Windows Vista (despite a virtual machine doesn’t have a Trusted Platform Module to do that).

The whole process implies performing a special Vista installation process involving virtual floppy disk.

Read the whole article at source.

Surgient names Fred Pazos Vice President of Worldwide Sales

Quoting from the Surgient official announcement:

Surgient, the leader in Virtual Lab Management applications for software testing, training and evaluation, today announced the appointment of Fred C. Pazos to the position of vice president of worldwide sales.

Prior to joining Surgient, Pazos was vice president of sales and marketing for Exadel, a privately-owned software services and products company that provides rich application components to create business applications. At Exadel, Pazos developed and implemented a successful strategy to increase on-line sales that resulted in 275 percent growth in a 12 month period. Before Exadel, Pazos was vice president of sales and services at Everdream Corporation, where he developed alliances that grew the company’s channel business from zero to 35 percent in the first 18 months. Pazos also held vice president, sales roles at Intraware, a publicly-traded software company that provides electronic software licensing and delivery solutions. His experience also includes senior sales and marketing roles at IBM, Wyse Technologies and Hitachi America…

Release: VMware Converter 3.0.1

After three months since launch of Converter, 3rd generation of its P2V migration tool, VMware is ready to launch first minor update.

Anyway Converter 3.0.1 (build 44840) is not just a bug fixes release, since it introduces some remarkable new features:

  • Capability to import VMware Consolidated Backup images
  • Partial capability to import StorageCraft ShadowProtect images
  • Experimental command line interface (for Enterprise Edition only)

First feature is particularly important: VMware Consolidated Backup (VCB), introduced with VMware Infrastructure 3, is not a real backup solution, but more a sort of proxy, helping 3rd party backup solutions to access virtual machines stored in SANs facilities.

VCB anyway is not currently providing any help in restore saved virtual machines, and customers have to find their own way to perform this operation.

Introducing this new capability in Converter, VMware is seriously simplifying restore but it’s also showing future directions for disaster recovery: possibly in near future VMware Converter will be the only backup solution, performing a virtual to image (V2I ?) migration for backup, mimicking approach currently taken by PlateSpin.

Download the free Started Edition here.

Release: Zeus ZXTM Virtual Desktop Broker 1.2

Zeus Technology started looking at the virtualization market in November 2006, extending support for its load balancing solution, ZXTM, in VMware virtual machines.

Now with an unexpected move the UK company enters this market as player, launching a Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) broker.

In this first version Zeus supports for VMware ESX Server and Microsoft Virtual Server platforms, introducing some interesting features like:

  • Connection rules engine
    Users are connected to desktops based on rules defined by the administrator. In the simplest case, users are assigned to particular pools and are connected to an available virtual desktop. More complex rules based on a number of parameters can be created using a powerful rules engine
  • Connection draining
    Allows the administrator to take virtual machines out of service for maintenance or upgrade without disrupting logged-in users
  • Fault monitoring
    ZXTM VDB monitors availability and will only connect users to desktops known to be working correctly. If a virtual desktop fails, ZXTM VDB will raise an alert and will not try to connect users to that machine until it detects that it is working properly again

Despite interesting features, Zeus (like other VDI providers) may be unlucky since VMware, previously just providing the VDI platform, decided to rule the its own market created one year ago and just acquired VDI broker provider Propero, as virtualization.info has revealed last week.

Zeus Technology has been included in the virtualization.info Virtualization Industry Radar.

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