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Guest Post: VMware’s Biggest Threat Isn’t Microsoft

November 16, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

This is a cross-post of a blog article written by Gregory Ness, former VP of Marketing for Blue Lane Technologies who is currently working for InfoBlox.

The tech industry loves great battles between rivals, and it is often tempting to frame challenges within the context of specific competitive battles. Many see the entrance of Microsoft or even Citrix into virtualization as VMware’s biggest threat. I beg to differ.

VMware’s biggest threat is virtualization-lite, or the confinement of the virtualization business case to within hypervisor VLANS. VMware needs to get enterprises to the bigger picture, the full realization of the benefits of virtualization in the data center, including VMotion. If it cannot, then its sheer share of the data center market will be many times smaller than otherwise, with or without Microsoft or Citrix.

Getting beyond virtualization-lite should be VMware’s number one goal. That would involve unprecedented work with related IT eco-system elements. VMsafe was a great step forward, but it didn’t deliver dynamic security solutions capable of protecting moving VMs.

Another area directly impacted and often overlooked is the network itself. That is, can a static network infrastructure manage, protect, maintain and/or deliver dynamic systems and endpoints? If it cannot, then that is a problem for VMware and an opportunity for the network solutions players.

That is why I think the biggest VMware requirement for success is dynamic infrastructure, or Infrastructure 2.0.

There are substantial virtualization and cloud computing initiatives that will also depend upon dynamic infrastructure. We’ve talked about this issue at Archimedius from both the standpoint of virtualization security and cloud computing. Yet I’m discovering that the issue is much bigger than that. Some enterprises get this and are moving to more dynamic infrastructure; yet others are trying to figure it out.

I think this issue is bigger for IT and networking than a weak global economy. It promises to produce an explosion of breakthroughs in network, endpoint and application intelligence.

Filed Under: Guest Posts Tagged With: Archimedius, citrix, Greg Ness, Gregory Ness, guest post, microsoft, rivalry, rivals, threat, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualization-lite, vmware

AppSense Releases Environment Manager 8.0 For Personalizing Virtual And Physical Microsoft Platforms

November 11, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

AppSense, provider of user environment management solutions for large-scale environments, today announced that its newly released Environment Manager 8.0 leverages Microsoft server technologies, providing a scalable and efficient way to personalize both virtual and physical desktops across the enterprise.

The only enterprise solution that enables standardized virtual desktop environments to be fully – and automatically – personalized, AppSense Environment Manager 8.0 accelerates virtual desktop adoption by rapidly configuring desktops and applications with a user’s personal and policy settings without administrator intervention.

By decoupling both policy and personalization data from the desktop, managing them independently and applying them on-demand, AppSense’s user environment management solution lets IT use a combination of desktop and application delivery methods—such as desktop virtualization, presentation virtualization, streamed applications and local and provisioned desktops—and easily and transparently migrate large groups of users from physical to virtual desktops.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: AppSense, AppSense Environment Manager 8.0, desktop virtualization, Environment Manager 8.0, microsoft, physical platform, release, user environment management, VDI, Virtual Desktop Infrastructure, virtual platform, virtualisation, virtualization

VMware Set To Slash Software Prices By 10%

November 2, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

According to Microscope, VMware will slash its list price by 10% from Monday.  Matt Piercy, senior director of OEM alliances EMEA confirmed the price reduction.

This cancels out a 10% rise the virtualisation behemoth introduced on 1 September, which combined with the rallying of the US currency has made VMware less competitive, particularly against Microsoft, said partners.

…

Sources close to the vendor said VMware had not predicted the sweeping moves in the currencies at the time of the September price rise which was making its products appear to be around 20% more expensive.

Hat tip to Alessandro.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: cuts, Matt Piercy, microsoft, pricing, software price, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware

Amazon EC2 Now With Beta Support for Windows

October 27, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Beta level support for Microsoft Windows is now available on Amazon EC2, in the form of 32 and 64 bit AMIs, with pricing starting at $0.125 per hour. Microsoft SQL Server is also available in 64 bit form.

With over two years of operation and many highly-requested features added, Amazon EC2 is today exiting its beta into general availability and offering customers a Service Legal Agreement (SLA). The Amazon EC2 SLA guarantees 99.95% availability of the service within a Region over a trailing 365 day period, or customers are eligible to receive service credits back. The new Amazon EC2 SLA is designed to give customers additional confidence that even the most demanding applications will run dependably in the AWS cloud.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: Amazon, Amazon EC2, Amazon EC2 for Windows, Amazon EC2 SLA, Amazon EC2 Windows, ec2, microsoft, Microsoft SQL Server, Microsoft Windows, SQL Server, virtualisation, virtualization, windows

Microsoft Hyper-V 2.0 To Support Live Migration

October 27, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

According to Bink.nu, Windows Server 2008 R2 will include Hyper-V R2, aiming to deliver the final pieces for enterprise level OS virtualization (together with SCVMM2008) and to really compete with VMware at that level.

Stephen Bink writes:

“The most anticipated is of course Live Migration: moving running VM’s from one host to another without interruption of services running inside the VM’s

To accomplisch this technique a new shared filesytem is needed and so will also be introduced in Hyper-V 2.0: Clustered Shared Volumes.

The Live migration works best together with System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008, it can provide additional Live Migration management and orchestration scenarios such as Live Migration via policy.”

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: Hyper-V, Hyper-V 2, Hyper-V 2.0, microsoft, Microsoft PDC, Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2, SCVMM, SCVMM 2008, SCVMM2008, virtualisation, virtualization, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2

Microsoft Launches Cloud Platform, Dubs It Windows Azure

October 27, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Ray Ozzie opened the Microsoft PDC ’08 this morning with a keynote speech, announcing Windows Azure, Microsoft’s “Windows in the cloud” (press release here). It is a new service based operating environment, which he described as a massive highly scalable service platform. What is being released today is just a fraction of what it will become. It will be Microsoft’s highest scalable system enabling people and companies to create services on the Web.

Ozzie described how this platform combines cloud-based developer capabilities with storage, computational and networking infrastructure services, all hosted on servers operating within Microsoft’s global datacenter network. This provides developers with the ability to deploy applications in the cloud or on-premises and enables experiences across a broad range of business and consumer scenarios.

Mary-Jo Foley offers a ‘guide for the perplexed‘.

Microsoft did not disclose pricing, licensing or timing details for Azure. The company is planning to release a Community Technology Preview (CTP) test build of Azure to PDC attendees on October 27.

More details later.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: Azure, cloud, cloud computing, cloud platform, microsoft, Microsoft Azure, Microsoft PDC, Ray Ozzie, virtualisation, virtualization, Windows Azure, Windows cloud platform, Windows in the cloud

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