Virtualization & Cloud Computing Industry News [14.09.09] September 14, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: App-V, Citrix, DaaS, Data Recovery, Desktone, IBM, Marathon Technologies, MDOP, Microsoft, VDI, VMware, Wyse
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It has been a while that we have posted here … for wich we offer our humble excuses. We’ll do our best to not let you down the following weeks, months, …
- Microsoft will release MDOP 2009 R2 shortly after the release of Windows 7 on October 22nd, instead of Q1 2010 as previously expected [Full article]
- VMware released the 1.0.2 (Build 188925) version of their VMware Data Recovery solution [notes] and vCenter Lifecycle Manager solution version 1.0.2 [notes]
- BriadMadden TV: Dive into PC-over-IP, which will be released with View 4 [Full media]
- Parallels announced the addition of Microsoft Office Communications Server R2 to its Parallels Automation offering [Full article]
- Marathon Technologies names new CEO and President: Jim Welch [Full article]
- IBM plans to launch the Smart Business Desktop offering in October 2009 with a subscription model, the solution is based on collaboration between IBM, Citrix, Desktone, Wyse and VMware [more]
EVENTS:
- October 13th, 2009 – Online – “CitrixLive: Secrets, Lies and VDI” - free virtual event – [register]
Virtualization & Cloud Computing News [09.04.09] April 9, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: BlueCat, Cisco, Citrix, Devon IT, ESX, StorMagic, Tidal Software, Veeam, Vimware View, XenDesktop
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- Thin clients from Devon IT Europe have been VMware View certified
- BlueCat launches its Proteus and Adonis products as virtual appliances for VMware ESX
- VMware View 3.0 has been arwarded a 7,5/10 by Infoworld Test Center (report), the last test of XenDesktop (version 2.0) resulted in 8.3 (report)
- Veeam introduces version 4.5 of nWorks Management Pack for integration in vCenter and SCCM (more)
- Cisco to buy Tidal Software, who have a focus on intelligent application management and automation solutions, which will be integrated into Cisco’s Data Center 3.0 view.
- StorMagic , who specializes iSCSI SAN management software for virtualized environments, launched an extensive channel program (more
Virtualization & Cloud Computing News [07.04.09 - UPDATE 2] April 7, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Apple, Linux, OpenGL, OVF, Snow Leopard, Solaris, Sun Microsystems, VirtualBox
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- Sun Microsystems has update its x86 VirtualBox with support for OVF 1.0 and performance enhancements (3D graphics acceleration for Linux and Solaris using OpenGL. Support for Apple’s Snow Leopard (more)
- The GRIDS Laboratory of the University of Melbourne has released CloudSim: a novel framework for modelling and simulation of cloud computing infrastructure and services (more)
Proposal for “OSI alike”-model for Data Centers April 7, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Data Center Pulse, Data Center Stack, OSI
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Data Center Pulse released their proposal for the Data Center Stoack, an OSI-model a-like stack to describe the involved architecture. As the OSI-model the proposed Data Center Stack has seven layers.

- Data Center Pulse – Proposal for Data Center Stack
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [07.04.09] April 7, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Amazon, Desktop Analysis Pack, EC2, FastScale, Lanamark, Server Virtualization Design Module
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- Lanamark releases Desktop Analysis Pack for accelerating desktop virtualization projectes by offering extensive analytics. It also offers insight to the type of device, associations between devices (PC-monitor, …), installed apps vs used apps … Once the analysis has been performed, this analysis can be used with the Server Virtualization Design Module of Lanamark to roll out the ideal server infrastructure (more)
- FastScale optimizes software stacks for Amazon EC2, 95% smaller environments, 75% less memory needed (more) There is beta-program available
- SaaS will be good for 20% of the commercial email market by 2012, coming from only 1% in 2007. Report by Gartner
- HyTrust releases the HyTrust Appliance, an appliance offering insights into the behaviour of VMs with full control of all the ‘events’, single point of control and visibility for hypervisor configurations, compliance and access management. The solution works with Symantec, Citrix and VMware (more)
Virtualization & Cloud Computing Industry News [06.04.09] April 6, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Citrix, DTMF, IBM, Pano Logic, Sun
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Cloud computing vendors converge on definition, goals April 3, 2009
Posted by Jürgen De Wolf in Cloud Computing.add a comment
When “cloud computing” became the buzz phrase of the moment in IT sometime in the past year or two, you could probably have been forgiven for having no idea what those two words meant, or for questioning whether they meant anything at all.
But as a major cloud computing conference in New York made clear this week, analysts and vendors are converging on a standard definition of cloud computing, and agreeing that the cloud approach to technology is gaining traction in the minds of service providers and customers.
Cloud computing is not really a technology by itself but an approach to building IT services that harnesses several converging factors in the IT world, including the rapidly increasing horsepower of servers and virtualization technologies that unleash power by combining many servers into large computing pools and dividing single servers into multiple virtual machines that can be spun up and powered down at will.
Led by companies such as Amazon, vendors are building massively scalable server farms to offer compute power, storage, business software and application building platforms over the Internet, using self-service interfaces that let customers acquire resources at any time they want and get rid of them the instant they are no longer needed. Private clouds deployed by enterprises for their own users are built along the same principles, but done so completely within the firewall.
Amazon CTO Werner Vogels, delivering a speech at Sys-Con’s Cloud Computing Conference & Expo this week, showed a slide featuring an early 1900s beer brewery that contained its own power generators. “They had to be experts in electricity to brew beer. Something is off there,” he said. “These guys couldn’t wait to dump their own generators and start to use electricity from other companies.”
Just as electricity became a shared service, or utility, so too will computing power, Vogels and other commentators say. If you are the founder of a start-up that is building an application for Facebook, you have to prepare for the possibility of becoming immensely popular overnight, Vogels says. But you might also fail. That’s why you need on-demand access to the power of 5,000 servers at any time, without having to spend the money up front. Or if you run a seasonal business, you may need huge amounts of computing power one month out of the year, but very little during the remaining 11 months.
“There is a shift from infrastructure being a capital expense to a variable cost,” Vogels said..
Cloud computing borrows concepts from grid computing, namely the ability to harness large collections of independent computing resources to perform large tasks; and from utility computing, namely the metered consumption of IT services, according to speaker Kristof Kloeckner, the cloud computing software chief at IBM. But perhaps the real impetus for cloud computing are failings within the current IT infrastructure, he says. Seven out of 10 IT dollars are spent on maintaining current systems, and perhaps 85% of capacity in distributed computing environments sits idle at any given time, he said. Storage requirements are escalating too quickly for many data centers to keep up.
The basic message from vendors: Cloud computing, while still in its infancy, is the solution to these problems.
Sys-Con’s conference coincided with the formation of the Cloud Security Alliance, an industry group urging common best practices in on-demand, Web-based computing. Separately, this week saw the release of the Open Cloud Manifesto, a document urging vendors to agree on basic principles related to cloud computing and the interoperability of competing cloud services. The manifesto drew criticism from Microsoft, but has a long list of supporters including major industry players such as AMD, IBM, Rackspace, Sun and VMware.
Reuven Cohen, the founder and chief technologist for cloud computing start-up Enomaly, and one of the people responsible for bringing the manifesto to the public, said Tuesday that he has met with Microsoft, IBM, Cisco, Intel and other players and found some common ground. “We basically agreed that we have more in common than we have differences. I would describe it as ‘we’re friends again,’” Cohen said.
Cohen is scheduled to speak at the Cloud Computing Forum Wednesday and said he plans to advocate the creation of an industry association focused on marketing a cohesive picture of what cloud computing is.
While many vendors are still defining cloud computing in different ways, Cohen argues that “we can still compete but we don’t necessarily have to tell different stories about what the cloud is. There is an opportunity to come together and grow the market.”
Still, many questions remain to be answered about cloud computing. Customers want data security, performance, availability, and service-level agreements guaranteeing minimum standards for all three.
While companies like Amazon and Rackspace offer computing power over the Web, and the Salesforce.coms of the world deliver software-as-a-service, a whole crop of third-party vendors who layer services over the cloud are starting to emerge.
Security and customers’ ability to control their own resources are among the top concerns, says Patrick Kerpan, CTO of Cohesive FT, a vendor whose technology helps customers shift workloads to virtualized platforms and external cloud services with a standard interface. Cloud computing may be an improvement over existing systems in many ways, but “it’s definitely not a panacea for bad design,” he says.
Cloud vendors will be judged on five points: security, scalability, availability, performance and cost-effectiveness, Vogels said. While there are shortcomings today, he predicted huge advancements in the next few years.
“It is still day one,” Vogels said. “We’ve just begun widespread deployment of these services.”
Source: networkworld.com
Virtualization & Cloud Computing News [03.04.09] April 3, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Branch Repeater, Citrix, Netscaler, SAP, VMware, vSphere, WANscaler
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- SAP certifies Citrix Netscaler 9.0 and Branch Repeater/WANscaler as a complete solution to improve the delivery of the SAP applications. The SAP Portal response times were significantly better with the Netscaler technology (more)
- Rumours in the market indicate that VMware vSphere will be announced on April 21st
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [02.04.09 - Update] April 2, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: brokers, Cloud Computing, Cloud Security Alliance, ESX, ESXi, IBM, LotusLIve Engage, SaaS, VMware
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- IBM announced yesterday their first move to cloud computing with a SaaS offering for contact management, instant messaging and file sharing program in their own data centers. The fee per user per month will be between 10 USD and 45 USD, general availability of the suite is foreseen for April 7th and it will be marketed under the brand LotusLive Engage (more)
- VMware changes the number of supported virtual CPUs to 20 virtual CPUs per core across a board. The maximum number of vCPU remains unchanges: 192 (ESX) and 170 (ESXi Update 3) (more)
- Cloud Security Alliance formed to promote security best practices a cloud computing environment. Founding members include eBay and ING, furthermore PGP, Qualys and vScaler are also member (more)
- VDI Connection Brokers have been analyzed (more)
Citrix asks “What is a Service Provider License Agreement (SPLA)?” April 2, 2009
Posted by Yves Peeters in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, datacenter.Tags: Citrix, Licensing, Microsoft, virtualization, XenApp
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Microsoft has the best definition as they have been in this business for years now. They define a SPLA in the following way, “A licensing program that enables service providers and ISVs with a hosted offering to license Microsoft products on a monthly basis to provide services and hosted applications to their end customers.”
Some qualifying questions for entry into a SPLA program might be the following:
1. Do you provide software services and hosted apps on a rental, subscription or services basis?
2. Are you a hosting provider, an ASP, a SI or an ISV that provides software as a service?
3. Is one of your primary objectives to avoid up-front license fees and minimum commitments?
4. Is your goal to maximize the number of end-user served from the same underlying software?
5. Will your customers accept not owning the software or having it located at their site?
If you can answer YES to most of these questions then most likely a SPLA program would fit your business model.
According to Microsoft there are many benefits to using a SPLA. Because the license is subscription based over time it will often cost more than a perpetual license for the same software. However, the benefits far outweigh the cost if the business model is structured correctly.
The following is a list of benefits Microsoft uses for their SPLA program:
• No Upfront Costs
• Most Current Product Versions – You have access to the most current versions of the products available in the program
• Pay Based On Usage – Monthly usage-based cost means you pay only for what was made available the previous month
• Worldwide Distribution – Use Microsoft licensed products to sell your services in any part of the world
Please take a look here and vote!
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [30.03.09] March 30, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Apple, Citrix, Gartner, HP, ICA, iPhone, XenServer
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Citrix released the technical preview kit for the Apple ICA client to the Apple iPhone App Store, if you are looking for more technical information visit the following review by Michael Keen or go get your ICA client at the Apple Store.
Parallels is launching “Parallels Workstation Extreme”, a desktop workstation virtualization offering developed jointly with HP and NVIDIA (more).
Neterion Launches Third Generation I/O Virtualized X3110 10 GbE Server Adapter to the World-Wide Channel (more).
HP SNMP Agents for Citrix XenServer Retail Available (more).
Gartner predicts that the hosted virtual desktop (HVD) market will accelerate through 2013, reaching 49 million units (read the report)
Capex vs. Opex: … the Point About Cloud Economics March 27, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Cloud Computing.Tags: capex, cloud economics, opex
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Bernard Golden on the economics of cloud compouting: when keep the server in your own data center and when in the cloud?
His reaction to the missing factors in a lot of research on cloud economics:
… the actual cost of internal data centers vs. external cloud. Comparing the monthly cost of an EC2 server against a putatively similar piece of hardware in a data center is simple-minded, because it overlooks:
1. The direct costs that accompany running a server: power, floor space, storage, and IT operations to manage those resources.
2. The indirect costs of running a server: network and storage infrastructure and IT operations to manage the general infrastructure.
3. The overhead costs of owning a server: procurement and accounting personnel, not to mention a critical resource in short supply: IT management and its attention.
(more)
Major Shift to Cloud IT Services Inevitable according to IDC March 27, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Cloud Computing.Tags: Cloud Computing
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IT infrastructure and services delivered over the cloud will be ubiquitous within five years, and vendors that ignore the shift from on-premises software to Internet-delivered technology will be left in the dust, IDC analyst Frank Gens predicted at the IDC Directions conference in Boston (more)
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [04.02.09] February 4, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: 3D graphics, Citrix, Clustered Systems, fanless cooling system, HDX, McAfee, SaaS, XenDesktop
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McAfee launches internal division which will focus on SaaS, the division has the goal to increase the number of applications which the company will offer as a SaaS concept.
Citrix releases Citrix HDX with XenDesktop 3.0, which enhances multimedia, video, voice, 3D graphics and “adaptive orchestration” that sense the underlying capabilities in the data center (more)
Clustered Systems is developing a fanless cooling system for servers using a cold plate, which contains a tubing system filled with liquid coolant. By removing fans and dedicating more power to processors, the company says its product will support power densities of up to 80 kilowatts per rack (more)
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [03.02.09] February 3, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Memory Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Citrix, EMC, Gartner, Independence, Lanamark, Memory Virtualization Platform, Microsoft, mRemote, Netapp, Parallels, Remote Desktop, RNA networks, RNAmessenger, Solid State Disk, View Open Client, Visionapp, VMware, Xenocode
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It has been a while since we posted the last ‘virtualization & cloud industry news”, our excuses for this, here are the most important announcements:
Following project Independence of Citrix (a baremetal client hypervisor in collaboration with Intel), VMware released its open source VDI client: VMware View Open Client. VMware hopes to maximize its return by focussing thin client vendors, these thin clients will form an important number of all installed devices according to Gartner. So the battle moves from the server-side to the desktop. (more)
EMC and Microsoft extend their collaboration into 2011 (more)
Following the European Code of Conduct for Data Centers, the Green Grid initiative will be announcing on the 4th plans to develop a new metric for data center productivity and a data center 2.0 design guide.
RNA networks specializing in memory virtualization software (transforming server memory into a shared network resource) announced the launch of its Memory Virtualization Platform (MVP) and first product, RNAmessenger, based on the MVP (more)
The partnership between Xsigo and Dell will result in additional I/O ports on PowerEdge servers on the fly without the need for extra network interface cards, providing increased I/O virtualization. (more)
Parallels will preview its new hypervisor which was initailly scheduled for 2006 on its Summit 2009, furthermore its new orchestration product (Virtual Automation) will also be previewed.
Visionapp has released Remote Desktop 2009 with additional support for Citrix ICA, VNC, SSH, Telnet and HTTPS furthermore there are features of mRemote included in the new release (more)
Lanamark specializing in virtualization capacity planning and IT assessment software, the availability of Lanamark Suite 2009, including support for monitoring Citrix XenServer and VMware ESX, supplements server information with power consumption, form factor, age and warranty metrics, and simplifies capacity planning with significant user experience and reporting automation enhancements. (more)
XenoCode has released Virtual Application Studio 2009 building further in the application virtualization market (more)
Texas Memory Systems and NetApp partner on solid state disk
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [29.01.09] January 29, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: 6fusion, CiRBA, Double Take, EMC
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6fusion Launches Virtualization Utility Computing Node — The Infrastructure Node consists of an enterprise class hardware architecture that is federated by 6fusion’s Utility Computing software, UC6. UC6 turns any virtualized computing infrastructure into a fully accessible utility computing system (more)
EMC reports 45% drop in profits in fourth quarter (more)
Double-Take Software announced that it is extending its GeoCluster offering to support failover clustering and the hypervisor-based virtualization in Windows Server 2008. GeoCluster is a software-based replication solution designed to integrate seamlessly with failover clustering (more)
Citrix shows nice results, 10% of the workforce has to go
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [27.01.09] January 27, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: VMware, Citrix, Virtual Computer, NxTop, Sybase, Parabon
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Citrix invests (together with capital investment companies) for 15M USD in Virtual Computer (more)
Sybase releases Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise Virtualization Cluster Edition (more)
Parabon releases version 4 of Frontier Grid Virtualization Platform (more)
VMware released fourth quarter and full year results (more)
How can SAAS become a success? January 27, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Cloud Computing, datacenter.Tags: SaaS
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(reflection on an article by Mary Hayes Weier – Informationweek)
First of all we talk about Software-as-a-service in this “reflectiondoc” and not about “Storage-as-a-Service”. Over the past 5 years SaaS has grown in marketshare, yet it has not yet gained general acceptance in the enterprise market.
A. General Acceptance
The first thing that should happen is general acceptance by MS, Oracle and SAP according to Mary Hayes Weier pure by the fact that enterprise won’t walk away from their heavy investements and developments in ERP systems like Oracle and SAP. Out of the mentioned 3 only Oracle has a SaaS solution for its Siebel CRM, the other two have a SaaS concept in which the SaaS-end connects with the on-premise installation. So it is not only the companies that might not immediately move to SaaS it is also the vendor that has currently more advantages, when selling ordinary licenses. This brings us to the point in which that licensing-systems need to be ‘rethinked’. This rethinking might take ages but other companies that have jumped on the SaaS-wagon are not exactly waiting on the side of the road till the big ones have made up their mind. One thing is for sure, when a large vendor sees the money in a certain technology, the licensing will be adopted accordingly without damaging the normal revenue-streams for ordinary license (for example: changes in CAL licensing for W2Kx Virtual Machines). Futhermore this adoption will generate an avalange to the other vendors that will promptly follow the move.
B. Uptime & Flexibility
Another aspect is uptime, reaching a 100% uptime would be nice, but is it feasible? What happens when there is downtime, a SaaS customer can not go to the data center to fix the problem he will have to rely on the expertise of the SaaS provider. What does that mean when implementing specific built applications in a SaaS environment? As Mary states in her article, there is no possibility that the customer can send his own crew to the data center to fix the problem. This brings us once again to an earlier post about possible cloud providers, it is clear that VARs and Integrators are one step ahead as they have the background on the customer and even often have developed the software. Another issue that comes to mind is the number of different SaaS-providers that have been specializing in a niche segment: Intacct (ERP), Authoria (HR), Startup Workday (ERP), Take Workday, Concur (Employee Expense Management), how would you use an ERP SaaS-provider and link it to the HR SaaS-provider? This brings us to the next focal point: Integration
As customer will not throw out their expensive investements in onsite licenses and require flexibility with SaaS-enabled applications, the only way to go is to offer the capacity to integration newly rolled-out SaaS-applications with onsite applications. This integration consists out of two players: the SaaS-provider and those vendors that have written the onsite software and the SaaS applications. Three parties to setup one line between two applications, three weak links? There is a clear need for some standardization. Furthermore integration means development, which means additional cost. In order to be convincing there need to be a clear TCO model, which is currently not yet fully available although some SaaS-providers have TCO calculations. These TCO calculations do not incorporate the additional development cost if needed. The development and integration has shown to be the expensive factor in the calculation, to eliminate this calculations customers must be convinced that they can do without customization and that might be a very hard part to do.
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [21.01.09] January 21, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Citrix, Independence, Intel, Qsan, Sun, VMware
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Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [20.01.09] January 20, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Citrix, hypervisor, Igel, Intel
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Citrix is working together with Intel on a Type-1 hypervisor, the product is scheduled to be released in 2H2009 in two versions: an open source version to the Xen project and a commercial Citrix product. (more)
Earlybert pointed to us that it is an Type1 hypervisor and not a Type2, he is absolute correct, we have corrected the remark. Thanks Bert.
Igel Technology will release a new productline on January 28th, 2008 with increased flexibility and management.
Virtualization Industry Survey – Part 1 [virtualization.info) January 20, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Hyper-V, report, VMware, XenServer
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Virtualization.info conducted a research on ‘the state of the sector’ in October last year, they have released the first results on their website:
Seen the number of respondent we must say that it has been an extensive study, approximately there was a 50/50 rule between the US and EMEA. The size of the companies -however- does not always reflect the real world, more than 64% of the respondents was working for a company with more than 1000 users.
One thing was a little bit “surprrising” in the TOP3 of ‘used platforms’ you get VMware, XenServer and Hyper-V, as one would expect. But Hyper-V is way above VMware, which is little strange seen the ‘time’ it has been on the market. Another explanation comes from the size of the companies in the survey.
Cloud Computing: disruptive or sustaining innovation? January 15, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Cloud Computing.Tags: Cloud Computing
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There are new technologies that make it and other that don’t. Perhaps the book by Clayton Christensen “The Innovator’s Dilemma” can give some answers to that question that is on everybodies mind these days
…. Will cloud computing achieve its goals, is it a sustaining innovation or disruptive innovation…
The CEO of HyperStratus (Mr.Bernard Golden) gives his view on this in his post.
… I guess the answer is that cloud computing can be seen as both sustaining and disrupting, but is ultimately likely to be disruptive, despite the efforts of many IT organizations to corral it as a sustaining innovation—and if you’re an IT organization on the wrong side of that corralling attempt, cloud computing may be the ultimate outsourcing option—…
… The fact that virtualization is a sustaining innovation accounts for why it has been so rapidly taken up …
Time will tell of course what type of innovation cloud computing will be, but one thing is clear that we are at the steps of a new period.
Personally I strongly believe that within the SMB market the concept will be a sustaining innovation as IT VARs and Integrators will offer the services to their existing customerbase. In the enterprise sector it could be disruptive as they have the scale / the budgets and the needs for a public cloud with high security standards. Afterall it will be the ’scale’ and ‘the money’ that will have to go hand in hand in order to get ‘off the ground’.
What do you think, feel free to comment …
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [15.01.09] January 15, 2009
Posted by Yves Peeters in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Datacore, EMC, NeoAccel, SANmelody, Sun, ToutVirtual, VirtualIQ, Vizioncore, VMware, vOptimizer Pro, VPN, xVM Ops Center, xVM Server
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DataCore’s SANmelody solution has won the SNS Achievements in Technology Award for the “Storage Virtualization Project of the Year” for the installation at Volkswagen Financial Services. (more)
David Marshall shares his reflections on “VMware’s aggressive product road map for 2009″ and concludes with “I started this post by remembering a question I had asked myself during VMworld 2008: “What aren’t they going to do?” (more)
Sun released earlier this weeks document regarding xVM Server 1.0 and xVM Ops Center 2.0, however they have removed the documents as senior management decided not to release the docs until “General Availability” of the products. Most important changes are live migration, resource pools, support for Solaris 10 – RHEL 5.2 – Windows XP – Windows 2003
VMware has always been in the market as an independent EMC daughter, today EMC steps up the integration and gives the sign to the market, we are the best for VMware. What about other storage vendors? (more)
Vizioncore releases vOptimizer Pro 2.0, a utility to reclaim unused space in Windows virtual machines. Not so long ago Vizioncore announced vOptimizer 4.0, which has been removed from the product portofolio as vOptimizer Pro 2.0 has been released. (more)
NeoAccel has recently introduced the VMware version of its flagship SSL VPN product called the SSL VPN-Plus. (more)
ToutVirtual announced the availability of VirtualIQ Pro 3 (VirtualIQ Pro). VirtualIQ Pro is a management and automation program designed to support customers in every stage of virtualization deployment. (more)
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [08.01.09] January 8, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Aranxa, Artifact, Citrix, CohesiveFT, EMC, Fujitsu, Lighthouse, PalmSecure LogonDirector, VMware, Windows
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Fujitsu announces availability of PalmSecure LogonDirector, the enterprise edition seamlessly integrates with Citrix Password Manager and has therefore received the Citrix Ready Status (more)
Altough EMC has bought parts of SourceLabs and has an increased focus on ‘the cloud’, they will cut another 2400 jobs (7% of the total workforce), apparently there would be no impact on VMware.µ
Windows server 2008 R2 is publicly available as beta (more)
CohesiveFT adds kernel-based VM-format to its automated Elastic Server Platform.
Artifact updates virtualzation platform with “project portofolio” and “lifecycle management” in their SaaS Lighthouse product. (more)
Nominations for this year’s Data Centres Europe Awards are higher than ever say the organisers, BroadGroup. With entries closing on 31 January, the judging panel look set to consider a wider array of talent and innovation than ever before, with countries across Europe much more significantly represented. (more)
Virtualization according to Dilbert (comic)
Aranxa launches CuroERP Cloud as SaaS, it is aimed at providing sizable economies of scale and vertical solutions to small and medium business.
VirtualLogix appoints Glenda Dorchak as CEO (she comes from Intrinsyc Software)
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [07.01.09] January 7, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: VMware, Sun, Microsoft, Vizioncore, Igel, Amazon, cloud attached storage, View 3.0, LinMin, QLayer, Citrix Synergy, NASDAQ
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Registration for Citrix Synergy 2009 in Las Vegas has been opened. Synergy hosts this year Network World Live!, Virtualization Congress, Geek Speak Live!
Igel Technology is one of the first thin client vendors to obtain VMware View 3.0 certification approval for their thin clients.
LinMin introduces bare metal provisioning 5.3 with improved GUI and support for the latest Linux distris.
Sun buys QLayer, Qlayer will be part of the cloud computing unit within Sun. QLayer was one of the driving forces behind CloudCamp Brussels and generated a turnover of around 0,8 million EUR. The company specializes in development of virtual data center software.
VMware confirms that eight new ESX configurations have been approved by Microsoft for support under the Server Virtualization Validation Program (SVVP). (more)
Tod Nielsen has been hired by VMware, Tod comes from Borland, where he’s been CEO for the last three years. He will be the new VMware chief operating officer, a specially created job that reports to fellow Microsoft veteran, VMware CEO Paul Maritz.
Bob Muglia has been named president of the Server and Tools Business within the Redmon giant Microsoft, he served the same group previously as Vice-President.
Vizioncore announced that vRanger Pro 3.2.8, the latest version of its backup and restore solution, is the first product on the market today to provide full support for VMware ESXi 3.5 (more)
Intel is sued by Matthew Robert Young for $5 billion from prison. Mr. Young insists that the chip maker has based its core 2 Duo chip and its virtualization technology are based on trade secrets … (more)
Parallels updates its Mac desktop virtualization software to improve DirectX support and adds experimental support for upcoming Microsoft and Apple operating systems (more)
NASDAQ uses Amazon for cloud storage (more)
JP Morgan:2009 Cloud Computing Outlook January 6, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Cloud Computing.add a comment
Bert Bouwhuis pointed me to the a report by JP Morgan on Internet-oriented companies, the 340 pages contain some valuable information on cloud computing:
Some extracts:
- “… Cloud computing was on track to be the buzzword of 2008 until it was displaced by the credit crunch. But beneath the buzz, we think there is a compelling technology. …”
- “… Cloud application aims to replace software …”
- “… Cloud storage, processing aim to replace hardware …”
JP Morgan expect growth for the SaaS and cloud applications for the consumer and small businesses due portability, collaboration, convenience and low prices (some Google applications are available as of 50 USD/usr/yr). But there has to be paid attention when it comes to data security, lack of features and relience on internet connection.
When looking at “cloud services” they see advantages in scalability, pricing and the possibility to focus on the core business and not on the infrastructure as that is offered by the cloud provider. Due to the current limitation of the systems they find that configuration-possibilities and data-security are the two most important factors to keep in mind.
Their outlook for ‘Cloud Computing’: “… We think the cloud computing model offers compelling solutions …” and ” … we see services converging to essentially a commodity business …”
Virtualization & Cloud Industry News [06.01.09] January 6, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, datacenter, desktop virtualization.Tags: Atmos, CAS, cloud attached storage, CTERA networks, Decho, EMC, Hulk, SourceLabs, VMware
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CTERA Networks has introduced its Cloud Attached Storage technology. By bundling Network Attached Storage and cloud storage services into a single appliance. (more)
WANdisco has selected the rPath rBuilder and rPath Lifecycle Management Platform to build and maintain its Subversion MultiSite solution as a manageable set of application images for delivery in virtualized and cloud-based environments. (more)
EMC bought parts of SourceLabs (and not the complete company as we posted before), those parts will be integrated in EMC’s Cloud Infrastructure Business (which has 2 offerings: one SMB and one for enterprise). SourceLabs will be integrated in the second offering which combines Atmos and Hulk. Channel Register in the UK, however believes that SourceLabs will be integrated in the SMB segment (Decho), which is consumer oriented with a focus on online backup. A spokesman of EMC clearly confirmed that the purchase is aimed at Atmos, which targets automation of management of huge storage volumes across large distances.
EMC has confirmed that it has become Gold VMware Authorized Consultant (more)
It is all about automation … [Part 2] January 5, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Cloud Computing, Data Center Management.Tags: Cisco, SLauto, VDC-OS, Workflow Studio
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Following the article in Virtualization Review and our post on “It is all about automation”, John Urquhart (Market Manager for Cisco’s Data Center 3.0 Strategy) gives his view on automation and especially on cross-vendor and the future of the IT
” … It will work through accepted standards and protocols between components at all levels of the distributed compute stack. VDC-OS and Citrix Workflow Studio are pieces of the puzzle, but there is much work under way throughout the IT industry. … “
For that he is absolutely right, but what is more important is his view on the changing role of the system administrators.
” … I would also strongly recommend that system administrators begin to think about how they would automate their jobs. Better yet, how would you eliminate the need for the human-centric processes you use to manage VMs altogether, in favor of tight metrics-centric optimization policies? … “
When systems like Citrix Workflow Studio and VMware VDC-OS go mainstream it will be much more about managing the global infrastructure with proactive projects instead of the current often applied politic of break-fix.
One thing is for sure this will result in once again (as I already stated many times before) an IT infrastructure adopting to the business needs and Service Level Automation is looming around the corner. Providing the possibility to VARs, Integrators and Cloud Providers to focus on that where they are best at … strategical work and the future cloud providers are surely amongst them.
Largest Singaporean Cloud Provider moves to XenServer January 5, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Cloud Computing.Tags: Alatum, Cloud Computing, SCS, XenServer
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In an interview between Bridget Botelho and Lim Jee Yen of SCS (Singapore Computer Systems, Mr Yen discloses why they have moved the Alatum cloud to Xenserver. Alatum is the largest commercial cloud in Singapore and operated by SCS. Some points:
- SCS was looking for a product with features and benefits built-in instead of self-coding software
- Cost-effective price due to the integrated features
- Integration with existing management software through APIs
- Support for ‘open virtualization format” (OVF)
- Open partner ecosystem
- Cloud iniatives such as C3
Some things become clear out of this story, there is a possible trend from open source hypervisors, which are often used by cloud providers to more packaged solutions and there is room for system integrators and VARs as cloud provider (cfr. our post on VARs and integrators in the cloud).
The full interview can be found here.
Virtualization Industry News [05.01.09] January 5, 2009
Posted by Roel Gydé in Application virtualization, Cloud Computing, Data Center Management, File Virtualization, I/O Virtualization, Server Virtualization, Storage Virtualization & Storage, desktop virtualization.Tags: Applied Identity, Citrix
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Applied Identiy’s Indetispher has been verified as Citrix Ready (more)
