Parallels Desktop Update reaches Release Candidate 2 status

Parallels is near to release its update for popular Desktop product.

In this new build, labelled Release Candidate 2, Parallels improves support for quad processor Mac Pro and Core 2 Duo iMacs, permitting to work on systems with up to 16GB RAM.

Download it here.

Meanwhile there is no sign of VMware competing product which has been announced but not even published in a beta program.

VMware Consolidated Backup receives industry support

Quoting from the VMware official announcement:

At Storage Decisions, VMware, Inc., the global leader in software for industry-standard virtualized desktops and servers, today announced broad industry support for VMware Consolidated Backup, a software product part of VMware Infrastructure 3 Enterprise edition that leverages virtualization technology to enable quick and easy backup and recovery.

Leading backup and recovery software providers CA, CommVault, EMC, IBM Tivoli, Symantec and Vizioncore have pledged support for the product to ensure their customers benefit from its robust data protection functionality…

vizioncore will integrate VMware Consolidated Backup in next esxRanger version

Quoting from Enterprise IT Planet:


Engineers at Vizioncore are already working on the latest improvements to the system. esxRanger Professional is being further upgraded to incorporate integration with VMware Consolidated Backup (VCB). Mohamed states that his company’s upcoming version of the product will also enhance VCB’s capabilities. VCB is a platform that enables backups to be performed on a proxy server that essentially offloads the backup process from the host to this proxy.

As esxRanger Professional performs hot backups without any agent technology, this means that no overhead will be imposed during a backup when leveraging VCB in the next release.

“VCB will snapshot the VM and offer it on the proxy server to be backed up by backup software,” he says. “Vizioncore will release the next version of esxRanger Professional in November with the functionality to enable the launching and leveraging of the VCB proxy server process.”

Read the whole article at source.

Companies have to invest more on virtualization training

Quoting from SearchCIO:

Many businesses are deploying virtualization technology without having the skills in place to manage it properly. As a result, there are a lot of CIOs with failed virtualization project on their hands.

According to a new study from Boulder, Colo.-based research firm Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), of 150 IT managers polled who had deployed virtualization, only 47% said they had sufficient skills within their company to manage virtualization.

“Virtualization essentially requires an entirely new skill set,” EMA’s Andi Mann said. “When you’re talking about deploying a physical environment like Unix, you need a Unix manager and then you deploy applications on top of that. When you do virtualization you still need all that, but you need virtualization skills as well: How to connect networks virtually as well as physically, and how to connect storage virtually as well as physically.”

Mann said CIOs who are adopting virtualization need to do a skills audit. He said they should also work with their vendors and with consultants to determine what skills are going to be needed…

Read the whole article at source.

I couldn’t agree more.

I already wrote in the article Indentifying must-have IT staff skills how new virtualization professionals must be a sort of super men, proving high competencies on a range of fields, from operating systems to storage technologies, from networking to security.

But it’s also worth to say there is a notable lack of training about virtualization from actual vendors.
Availability of courses and books is insufficient and it’s a real shame both VMware and Microsoft never published a book on their own technologies.

Webcast: The New Economics of Virtualization

Virtual Iron scheduled a new webcast for October 3rd in partnershop with Intel:

This webcast, featuring Intel and Virtual Iron, looks at emerging solutions that leverage industry-standard and open source technologies to dramatically change the economics of virtualization. The speakers will discuss the role of new technologies like hardware-assisted virtualization, open source hypervisors and policy-based automation that make the data center more efficient and flexible while delivering new levels of ROI.

Attendees will learn about:

  • Leveraging new technologies like Xen and Intel VT
  • Using virtualization to create more flexible infrastructure and deliver computing capacity on demand
  • Reducing the time it takes to provision and redeploy servers and applications from days/weeks to minutes
  • Supporting unmodified 32 and 64-bit Windows and Linux operating systems on a single virtualization platform
  • Running enterprise-class applications on virtual infrastructure
  • Centrally managing virtual computers and physical servers

Register for it here.

Chris Wolf on VMware ESX Server vs Microsoft Virtual Server

Quoting from SearchServerVirtualization:

..”Between Microsoft Virtual Server and [VMware] ESX, there’s no comparison,” said Chris Wolf, an independent consultant and author of Virtualization: From the Desktop to the Enterprise. “Bells and whistles-wise, ESX is still miles ahead of Virtual Server,” he said.

Over the course of his presentation, Wolf listed several areas where Microsoft has to work to bring Virtual Server up to snuff. For example, whereas VMware supports full access to the storage area network (SAN) within each virtual machine (VM), Microsoft Virtual Server guests access the SAN through a mount point or drive letter on the host operating system. Accessing the SAN this way adds latency, Wolf claims.

Wolf also called out the latency of the two platforms’ virtual disk implementations – the .vmdk file for VMware, and .vhd for Microsoft Virtual Server. VMware published tests that showed ESX Server latency at 13% when running with virtual (rather than physical) disks. Tests performed by the Australian consulting firm Capitalhead benchmarked Microsoft Virtual Server virtual hard drive latency at 28%…

Read the whole article at source.

While the comparison could be interesting Chris Wolf is comparing Microsoft Virtual Server with VMware ESX Server: I said so many times this is not possible.
Architecture (bare metal approach and optimized file system on ESX Server, just to name a couple) and prices are 2 points big enough to prevent any comparison from any point of view.

So while he in fact said there’s no comparison, I don’t understand why he actually did it.

Avamar introduces support for VMware products in its Axion

Quoting from the Avamar official announcement:

Avamar Technologies, Inc. a leading provider of enterprise data protection software, today announced support for VMware, eliminating customer challenges around quickly and efficiently backing up and recovering critical data from VMware virtual machines.

Avamar identifies redundant sub-file data segments within and across multiple virtual machines, host servers, and sites. Using patented data de-duplication and global single instance storage (SIS) technology, Avamar ensures that backup data segments are stored only once on a global basis. This effectively reduces the amount of data moved and stored by up to 300x, while providing daily full backups and rapid restores across existing LAN/WAN links…

Atempo introduces support for VMware ESX Server in its Time Navigator 4.1

Quoting from the Atempo official announcement:

Atempo, Inc., the leader in data protection and storage security for trusted information lifecycle management (ILM), today announced the release of Time Navigator 4.1.

This latest version features the second generation of Time Navigator’s integrated storage security module– Security and Compliance Manager–and features new support for VMware ESX Servers.

Time Navigator for VMware is designed as a complement to the standard Time Navigator backup agent installed on each virtual machine. Using VMware snapshot technology, Time Navigator can backup entire virtual machines without interrupting the work on these machines and can restore a complete virtual machine or just one disk. The restore interface provides administrators with a graphical view of all ESX Servers and virtual machines, with no need to install or configure complex scripts. In a few mouse clicks, administrators can quickly restore data with Time Navigator’s unique VMware GUI.

Key features of Time Navigator for VMware include:

  • Full Support of ESX
    This includes server backups, virtual machine backups and support of VMFS
  • User-friendly Restore Interface
    No need to install or configure complex scripts
  • Platform-independent Archive Module
    For long-term data retention and regulatory compliance
  • Disk-to-Disk-to-Tape Backups
    Backup the VMware ESX Server data to disk, then to tape for the most efficient backup architecture
  • Advanced Reporting
    For monitoring backup and recovery activities and performance

RingCube pioneers portable application virtualization with MojoPac

Quoting from the RingCube official announcement:

RingCube Technologies, Inc., the creator of truly portable personal computing, announced today it is offering software that for the first time allows any storage device, including iPods, USB flash or hard drives, or even cell phones, to mirror the capabilities and functionality of a private and secure PC.

With MojoPac, users can take all their information, settings, and applications such as Microsoft Office, iTunes, Adobe Photoshop, and top PC games such as World of Warcraft with them wherever they go, on any portable storage device, including ones many consumers carry with them every day. Mojopac transforms any computer into a personal computer, instantly.

To use MojoPac, consumers simply install the MojoPac software on their favorite device, install their applications and copy their files, select their settings and environment preferences, and then take it with them wherever they go. Whenever they plug their MojoPac enabled device into a Windows XP based PC, they can launch MojoPac, turning the host PC into a customized and private computing environment that recreates the same computing experience the consumer enjoys at home or work…