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Parallels Server Beta 3 Hits The Streets

April 10, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Parallels has released Parallels Server beta 3. The update includes an integrated toolset that includes Parallels Tools, Parallels Image Tool and Parallels Transporter (a P2V and V2V migration tool) to the hypervisor solution for server virtualization.

Parallels Server Beta

Built on Parallels’ bare metal hypervisor architecture and award-winning hypervisor-based virtualization technology, Parallels Server for Mac enables organizations to:

  • Standardize server hardware platforms
  • Effectively consolidate server resources
  • Consolidate and support legacy OSes and applications
  • Streamline server and application deployment, maintenance and management
  • Simplify software testing and development
  • Optimize server and application availability

More info here, download here.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Parallels, Parallels Image Tool, Parallels Server, Parallels Server Beta, Parallels Server Beta 3, Parallels Tools, Parallels Transporter, virtualisation, virtualization

IBM Unveils Research Initiative PHANTOM, Aims To Protect Virtual Servers Better

April 10, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

IBM recently announced a breakthrough in safeguarding virtual server environments and introduced new software to help businesses better manage risk. The company said the advances can provide businesses with substantial improvements in securing information, applications, and IT infrastructures around the globe.

IBM logo

IBM, the company that pioneered the concept of virtualization with its mainframe systems, is tackling the security issue with Project PHANTOM, an initiative that’s so secret that IBM won’t even say what the name means. This is part of the announcement that was made:

IBM’s PHANTOM initiative aims to create virtualization security technology to efficiently monitor and disrupt malicious communications between virtual machines without being compromised. In addition, full visibility of virtual hardware resources would allow PHANTOM to monitor the execution state of virtual machines, protecting them against both known and unknown threats before they occur. It is also designed to increase the security posture of the hypervisor — a critical point of vulnerability; because once an attacker gains control of the hypervisor, they gain control of all of the machines running on the virtualized platform. For the first time, the hypervisor — the gateway to the virtualized world and all that lays above it — can be locked down.

Ars Technica had a call with the people at IBM. The company was still not willing to talk in any detail about it, but I did learn some important information that answers the questions I raised in my original post, which I’ve included below in its own section.

For starters, PHANTOM is not one particular technology, but rather a widespread research initiative within IBM that will eventually result in a range of products, services, best practices whitepapers, etc.. The initiative was started two years ago as a collaboration among various hardware and software groups within IBM, and has since expanded to embrace some third parties whose identities IBM isn’t revealing just yet. The internal groups involved in the initiative include IBM’s X-Force Threat Analysis Service (a division of IBM’s Internet Security Systems), IBM Watson research center, and the server platform groups behind the z- and p-series servers, among others.

IBM stressed to me that the initiative will produce results for a wide variety of hardware/software combinations, including x86 systems, Windows, Linux, POWER, and others. So the scope of PHANTOM, broadly defined, includes all virtualization platforms, products, and services.

Clearly, whatever else it is, PHANTOM is also extremely ambitious. It’s also still mostly under wraps, so we’ll have to wait for more announcements before giving further details.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: IBM, IBM PHANTOM, PHANTOM, Project PHANTOM, research, virtual server, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualization security

VMworld 2008: Call for Presentations

April 10, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

If you have a virtualization success story you would like to share, VMware issued a call for presentations today for the upcoming VMworld 2008.

“Most VMworld attendees have some experience with virtualization and they are eager for insights that go beyond the consolidation of non-mission critical workloads. Are you using virtual machines to build a better disaster recovery solution? Have you virtualized a critical enterprise system? Have you found a creative solution how to charge back business users for virtual machine usage? Have you developed a process for planning VM capacity? Tell your peers about it!

Session proposals should provide an in-depth explanation of the technology and business challenges you have resolved, as well as a description of your architecture – hardware, software and networking setup of your solution. Advice, key success factors, data points and lessons learned while solving technical, organizational and process challenges related to virtualization deployment are always appreciated by your peers.”

If selected to present, you’ll receive a full conference pass for four days, access to all VMworld sessions and hands-on labs, and hotel accommodations for one night.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: call for presentations, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware, VMWorld, VMWorld 2008

Symantec Agrees To Acquire Virtualization Streaming Company AppStream

April 10, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

At the Symantec ManageFusion 2008 event in Las Vegas, Symantec announced during the keynote session that they have agreed to acquire AppStream, the streaming company that has been working with Altiris and Symantec for the past two years giving Altiris a boost to their SVS Pro product by leveraging AppStream’s streaming technology.

Symantec logo

Appstream logo

Symantec executive Ken Berryman, VP of Endpoint Virtualization said in a press conference that “the details of the acquisition are private” and that “there is no current plan to change the AppStream name.”

Srinivasa Venkataraman, CEO of AppStream, mentioned plans to have tighter integration with Symantec Management Workflow, which was released yesterday at the show. When asked about OS streaming to deploy virtual machines, the answer was, “Stay tuned.”

Filed Under: Acquisitions Tagged With: Altiris, application virtualization, AppStream, streaming, streaming virtualization, SVS Pro, Symantec, virtualisation, virtualization

IBM / Cisco Eyeing Acquisition of Citrix?

April 9, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Good thing we have a ‘Rumors’ category to assign to this type of speculations: several news outlets are running a story about Citrix possibly being an acquisition target for Cisco or IBM.

Citrix logo

A late April fool, or plausible?

Nasdaq traders bid up Citrix stock Tuesday on takeover rumors that have either IBM or Cisco purchasing the application delivery vendor.

Citrix’s stock went from a low of $30.60 Tuesday to a high of $33.75. Rumors of Citrix being purchased fueled the higher trading prices, says Jeffrey Gaggin, an enterprise software analyst for Avian Securities. Gaggin cautions that he has no way of knowing whether the rumors hold any truth.

But it would make sense for IBM or Cisco to purchase Citrix because Citrix’s acquisition of XenSource last year made it a strong player in the virtualization market, Gaggin says.

TheStreet adds the following financial analysis:

But even at what seems like a bargain price, Citrix isn’t cheap: With a market cap of $6 billion and expected revenue growth of 17% to $1.63 billion this year, the stock could command a fair premium, taking the potential buyout price north of $7 billion, assuming a premium of 15%.

IDC analyst Stephen Elliot sees some rationale for IBM and Cisco to go after Citrix. IBM could make the XenSource hypervisor its preferred brand and could better compete against VMware and Microsoft. This would run counter to H-P’s strategy, which has professed to being indifferent on the hypervisor question, Elliot said.

On Citrix’s side, IBM would lend “a lot more credibility” to the XenSource virtualization platform and provide development resources. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Elliot said.

[Source: ChannelWeb]

Filed Under: Rumors Tagged With: acquisition, buy-out, Cisco, Cisco Systems, citrix, IBM, rumor, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware

Google And Microsoft Set To Battle In The Clouds: App Engine vs. Red Dog

April 9, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Lots has been written already about Google’s new initiative called App Engine, a preview-release developer platform for Python applications, and now Microsoft seems to be throwing itself in the ring – where Amazon and Salesforce are also to be found – in order to get at least a piece of the cloud computing buzz momentum. LiveSide spotted a job posting with clear mentions of the Microsoft Utility Computing Platform, code-named Red Dog, and it sounds very much like a platform for building a Google App Engine type service.

LiveSide’s take:

“The posting itself is a little dense, written to appeal to seasoned developers looking for new challenges. But to paraphrase a bit, here’s what the (CIS) team is building with Red Dog:

  • an “efficient, virtualized” environment
  • a “fully automated service management system” (like the Google App Engine, you won’t have to worry about managing the system)
  • on “highly scalable” storage services (you only use the storage you need)
  • the service will “scale to millions of machines” across Microsoft’s data centers (geo-located, easy to maintain data centers, remember?)
  • “will lead the marketplace as the best platform for rapid development, deployment, and maintenance of internet services and applications”
  • SDK and tools will be included for external and internal customers
  • V1 for external customers in the coming year

Meanwhile, Gartner analysts Daryl Plummer and Thomas Bittman reportedly stated at the Gartner Emerging Technologies conference in Las Vegas that it will be another year – 2009 – before companies will start using cloud computing services extensively. “In the meantime, folks will have to define and sort out a lot of mumbo jumbo about the cloud.”

Interesting times!

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Amazon, Amazon Web Services, App Engine, cloud computing, Google, Google App Engine, microsoft, Red Dog, virtualisation, virtualization

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