Release: Oracle VM VirtualBox 3.2.6

Oracle continues to release minor updates for its hosted desktop virtualization platform VirtualBox at a crazy pace.

In mid May the company released VirtualBox 3.2, after just a few weeks of beta. In June the product was updated again two times, with version 3.2.2 and 3.2.4. And now we have the 3.2.6.

Like for the previous builds, this one too is primarily for bug fixing, but there’s a key addition: the support for 64bit guest operating systems on 32bit host OSes (assuming Intel VT or AMD-V are available and enabled at chipset level).

Release: Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization 2.2

Last week, at the Red Hat Summit in Boston, Red Hat announced the release of Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) platform 2.2

The new version, in beta since March, introduces a number of new features. The most important one is the inclusion of the Qumranet technology to manage a KVM-based VDI environment, dubbed Red hat Enterprise Virtualization for Desktop.

Red Hat also announced that RHEV 2.2 is supported on the Cisco Unified Computing System (UCS), which means that now Red Hat has an additional playground to compete with VMware.

What’s new in details:

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2X releases a VMware View client on a USB stick

The presentation virtualization firm 2X a couple of weeks ago released a new minimal Linux distribution called CloudClient OS (CCOS) which basically embeds the company’s ThinClientOS.

The free (and still in beta) operating system can be installed in a 512MB USB stick. It comes with pre-configured connection to popular cloud services like Google Apps and Microsoft Live, but most of all it comes with several VDI and presentation virtualization clients: Microsoft RDP, Citrix XenApp, VNC, of course the 2X VirtualDesktopServer Client, and even VMware View.

CCOS seems very much what Chrome OS may become if Google decides to target corporate users rather than just the consumer market.
Maybe, since Chrome OS is fully open source, 2X will be able to leverage that platform rather than developing its own.

Here’s an introductory video:

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Parallels announces Server for Mac 4.0

Last week Parallels announced the upcoming availability of its hosted server virtualization platform: Server for Mac 4.0

Parallels launched the first version of Server in June 2008. At that time virtualization.info wrongly reported the news saying that it was the bare-metal hypervisor that the company initially announced in 2005 and that appeared only in October 2009.
Parallels Server instead is a type-2 virtual machine monitor (VMM) that could compete with VMware Server, to be discontinued by June 2011, if VMware Server would be available for Mac OS X. But it’s not, so Parallels is basically the only player in this niche market.

virtualization.info couldn’t track any version of Parallels Server beyond 1.0, so this new build actually is the second release and not the fourth one.
It introduces a number of new features, including:

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Features comparison: Citrix XenDesktop vs Microsoft RDS vs Quest vWorkspace vs VMware View

Ruben Spruijt, one of the two authors of the Virtual Reality Check (VRC) Project, the independent benchmark validated by both Citrix and VMware, is back with a new project: VDI Smackdown.

The 33-pages free report is a feature comparison of the four major VDI platform available on the market: Citrix XenDesktop 4.0 Feature Pack 1, Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2 Remote Desktop Services, Quest vWorkspace 7.1 and VMware View 4.0.1.

VDISmackdown10.png

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Paper: Remote Desktop Virtualization Host Capacity Planning in Windows Server 2008 R2

 

Microsoft recently released a new paper titled Remote Desktop Virtualization Host Capacity Planning in Windows Server 2008 R2.

 

The 30-pages document provide guidance on how to properly size a VDI environment powered by Hyper-V and the Windows Server 2008 R2 connection broker:

This document presents some preliminary guidance and data around capacity planning for RD Virtualization Host and should be regarded as an update to the “Remote Desktop Session Host Capacity Planning in Windows Server R2” document. As such, it focuses mostly on the RD Virtualization Host-specific aspects of the capacity planning exercise, and briefly summarizes most of the facts that are equally applicable to both types (virtual and session) of Remote Desktop Services deployments. For a more complete understanding of all the considerations and guidelines, it is highly recommended that you read the RD Session Host white paper. The results presented in this document are based on a few scenarios that use Microsoft® Office applications. The document also provides basic guidance on the hardware and software parameters that can have a significant impact on the number of virtual machines that a server can support effectively.

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Release: VKernel StorageVIEW 1.0

In March the startup VKernel launched a simple and extremely effective free tool called CapacityVIEW: a single-window dashboard to immediately recognize the virtual infrastructure elements (data centers, clusters, hosts, virtual machines, resource pools, data stores), the resources allocation (both physical and virtual) and the amount of alerts that VMware vCenter is raising at any given moment.

In May the company repeated the experiment launching AppVIEW, another minimal dashboard that evaluates and presents potential CPU, memory, disk and storage I/O bottlenecks by collecting 30 days of performance stats.

Last week VKernel added a third free piece to its arsenal. This one is called StorageVIEW: it identifies the top five host/datastore pairs and their associated VMs with the highest storage I/O latency in a VMware environment:

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VMware launches two new courses: Manage and Design for Security and Transition to ESXi

Last week VMware announced two new classroom courses for the vSphere training path. The first is Manage and Design for Security. The second is Transition to ESXi.

Manage for Design and Security, available as a 3-days live classroom course, teaches how to secure the virtual networking layer, the vCenter Server management layer, the ESX/ESXi platform layer and the virtual machines virtual hardware layer. The course also introduces the discipline of configuration and change management in the last module, which is an extremely welcome addition.

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Red Hat hires a new Channel Business Development for Cloud Computing

In April Red Hat hired away from its major competitor Kevin Pereau, the Novell’s Director of ISV Ecosystems.

Pereau has been in Novell for more than five years, and now he’s in charge of the Channel Business Development for Cloud Computing at Red Hat.

The VAR Guy reports that Pereau will help drive the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) platform  marketing, and he’ll work closely with Red Hat North American Channel Chief Roger Egan and Global Channel Chief Mark Enzweiler.