SWsoft plans to snatch attention away from host VMware at the
VMworld conference in San Francisco,
starting 11 September, by showing off its pending first release of Parallels
Server for Mac and an update for its flagship Virtuozzo operating-system
virtualisation product.
As with the popular desktop version, Parallels Server will let users sit
rival x86 operating systems alongside OS X. “You will be able to run other
server OSes such as Enterprise Linux and Windows 2003 in a Parallels virtual
machine on an Xserve, which will make [the Intel-based servers] even more
powerful, useful components of datacentre infrastructure,” said Ben Rudolph,
SWsoft director of corporate communications.
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Both Virtuozzo v4
and Parallels Server are due to arrive later this year.
For its part, VMware is likely to showcase servers with virtualisation
embedded to boost ease of deployment and reliability.
The largest firm in the sector is expected to show off a slimmer version of
its ESX hypervisor that can sit in server firmware rather than having to be
installed to disk. Dell has already discussed a project for servers that ship
optimised for virtualisation without referring explicitly to VMware.
By packing core virtualisation capabilities into the server rather than on
disk, VMware might silence those who say its technology is difficult to install.
Also expected at VMworld is a technical preview of the next release of VMware
Server, also scheduled to arrive later this year. On the VMworld web site,
VMware has already said that the release will have a web-based console for
remote admin, and will be manageable by the next release of
VirtualCenter.
With the chiefs of Cisco, Intel and AMD making keynote speeches,
optimisations in switching and processors or chipsets are also likely.
Quest Software-owned Vizioncore will show off a beta of its new version of
esxRanger that lets
firms back up physical servers to virtual machines. Fastscale plans to show off
a module for its
Composer Suite
to automate deployment of physical and virtualised servers.
VMworld will attract plenty of attention thanks to the halo effect caused by
its host’s recent astonishing stock market debut. As of last week, VMware was
valued at about $24bn, making it the equal of Adobe and about a third larger
than Symantec.
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