Live from Citrix Synergy 2010: Day 2

Second day here in San Francisco for the Citrix Synergy 2010. See virtualization.info’s coverage of day one.

Today’s focus will be around virtual datacenters, with announcements for XenServer and cloud computing.

On stage we’ll see Michael Dell (Dell’s Chairman and CEO), Brad Anderson (Microsoft’s Corporate Vice president of the Management and Services Division) and Frank Gens (IDC’s Senior Vice President and Chief Analyst).

Frank Gens is on stage.

He starts summarizing the challenges, expectations and history of cloud computing.
Everything in his speech has been discussed million of times by now, and there’s no sign of news, so virtualization.info is not going to summarize again the whole thing here.

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Citrix XenClient features, GA availability and strategy

Yesterday, during its Synergy 2010 conference in San Francisco (see virtualization.info coverage), Citrix announced the availability of XenClient: the free client hypervisor formerly known as project Independence.

As published yesterday, the XenClient build released yesterday is Release Candidate.
A lot has been said about the huge delay that both Citrix and VMware accumulated to launch their client hypervisors, and the reasons behind it.
Despite that, Citrix managed to release a pretty stable version of the platform before VMware could do the same with it Client Virtualization Platform (CVP), and managed to support nine average laptops (three from HP, three from Lenovo and five from Dell).

After the keynote, virtualization.info sit with Peter Blum, Director Product Management and Marketing for this new platform, who detailed a lot of aspects never published before on XenClient.

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Live from Citrix Synergy 2010: Day 1

This year virtualization.info extends its live coverage of virtualization conferences to the Citrix Synergy 2010.
The event, taking place in San Francisco, actually started this Monday, but the first two days have been dedicated to the Citrix Technology Professionals (CTPs), the Citrix partners and other groups. Today and tomorrow instead the conference will be open to the general public with keynotes from Mark Templeton (Citrix’s President and CEO), Michael Dell (Dell’s Chairman and CEO), Brad Anderson (Microsoft’s Corporate Vice president of the Management and Services Division) and Frank Gens (IDC’s Senior Vice President and Chief Analyst).

Citrix is expected to announce the beta availability of XenClient as confirmed by early feedbacks already published yesterday evening by partners and attendees.
The presence of Michael Dell clearly indicates a major partnership announcement between the two companies, but there will be at least another key partnership will be announced with McAfee, as ChannelTimes and other publications already revealed.

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EMC invites VMware to sit at its new technology advisory board

An amusing piece appeared earlier this week on PC World: Carl Eschenbach, Executive Vice President of Field Operations at VMware claimed that media overplayed his company’s role in the Cisco-EMC partnership.

That’s a interesting statement considering that EMC owns about 80% of VMware and that Cisco invested in the virtualization vendors over $160M.
It’s interesting considering that the Virtual Compute Environment (VCE) coalition that EMC and Cisco formed and announced in November 2009 includes VMware.
It’s interesting considering that VMware invested (along with Intel) in the joint venture, ACADIA, that EMC and Cisco formed to build, operate and transfer the VBlocks fabric computing units.
And it’s interesting considering that EMC developed an ad-hoc fabric manager, the Ionix Unified Infrastructure Manager (UIM), that fully blends VMware’s virtualization platform with network and storage layers.

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VMware slams Red Hat virtualization offering on every possible aspect

Like pretty much every other big vendor in the IT space, VMware has many ways to hit competition. A very efficient one is to criticize other vendors though non-corporate blogs. This allows the company to be way less polite than what customers expect, while not keeping full responsibility for the critics if something wrong is said.

This approach has additional benefits: it allows customers to read a brutal (brutal, not necessarily brutally honest) review of products that may be hard to evaluate, it obliges competitors to defend their approach clarifying technical details that wouldn’t be revealed otherwise, and eventually it leads to counter-attacks, which expose additional weaknesses on both sides.
Over the long term this turns into a futile marketing skirmish (see the multi-year VMware-Citrix one), but at the beginning the information exposed could be really valuable.

This is what is going to (hopefully) happen between VMware and Red Hat now that the former completely smashed the new Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) platform, launched in November 2009.

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Release: CiRBA Data Center Intelligence 5.3

In September 2009 the Canadian startup CiRBA released version 5.2 of its capacity planning tool Data Center Intelligence (DCI).
Today the company finally releases a minor update, introducing a couple of new features:

  • Integration of server performance ranking data provided by the analysis firm IDEAS
  • Analysis of network traffic to recognize dependencies in multi-tier applications
  • Support for IBM Tivoli Application Dependency Discovery Manager (TADDM)

Benchmarks: Streaming and Virtual Hosted Desktop Study: Phase 2

Intel recently published a short 8-pages paper about the performance of virtual desktop streaming in a Microsoft VDI environment powered by Xeon X5570 CPUs, Hyper-V 2008 R2 and Citrix Provisioning Server 5.1, serving Windows 7 guest OSes.

The findings are rather interesting:

  • For basic office productivity applications, systems based on dual-core processors with streaming provided a 26 percent better WorldBench 5 performance benchmark score than VHD.
  • Streaming server utilization was consistently low. Streaming used about 1 percent of the processor while VHD used from 10 to 70 percent or more for up to 40 PCs.
  • A richer graphical user interface(GUI) with more features in Microsoft Windows 7 contributed to higher cumulative network traffic for both streaming and VHD, up to a 57 percent increase in traffic for 20 users.
  • Using WorldBench 5 tests as the primary indicator, local computing using the latest technology provided the best user experience.

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Cisco and EMC name ACADIA CEO, launch website

The Cisco and EMC joint venture, ACADIA, announced in November 2009, was formed to provide consulting services to those customers that will buy the fabric computing units, dubbed Vblocks, powered by VMware, Cisco and EMC technology and manufactured by the so called Virtual Computing Environment (VCE) coalition.

The two companies just appointed the joint venture’s CEO: Michael D. Capellas.

Cappellas was the he was Chairman and CEO of First Data Corporation, and before that, he was President and CEO at MCI.
But more importantly, Cappellas has been President of HP after merging Compaq with HP. At Compaq, he started out as CIO, then COO and later became Chairman and CEO.

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Cloud.com leaves the stealth mode and enters the IaaS cloud computing market

cloudcom Cloud.com (formerly VMOps) is an Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) cloud computing startup that was founded in August 2008 by Shen Liang, the former Vice President of Engineering at SEVEN Networks. Earlier in his career, Liang was the lead developer and key contributor to the success of the Java Virtual Machine at Sun.

The company, which counts 40 employees according to its Linkedin corporate profile, raised $6.6M in Round A led by Index Ventures, and another $11M in Round B, led by Index Ventures, Redpoint Ventures, and Nexus Ventures.

The Cloud.com management team also includes Kevin Kluge (Vice President of Engineering), who come from Yahoo! where he was the Senior Director of Engineering, Shannon Williams (Vice President of Business Development), who was the Vice President of EMEA operations at Solidcore Systems, and Peder Ulander (Vice President of Marketing), who was the Senior Vice President of Marketing in Sun.

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