Apple appears to have relented and given its tacit support to virtualisation
of Mac OS X Leopard. However, Apple’s terms continue to make virtualisation on
Mac servers less attractive than they might be.
Several users have spotted a change in the End User Licence Agreement (Eula)
for Leopard. Until the new terms, Apple’s official position was that Mac servers
could not run multiple instances of the OS without breaking its terms and
conditions.
At the first sight, that change is a boon for Mac server admins wishing to
run several instances of the operating system, as well as earlier Mac operating
systems, or Windows, Linux, Solaris or other third-party guest operating systems
that run on Intel hardware.
Experts noted that firms wishing to run multiple instances of Leopard will
need a separate licence for each, making the exercise potentially costly but
virtualisation companies were nevertheless impressed.
“It’s very good,” said Serguei Beloussov, chief executive of SWsoft, which is
developing Parallels Server for Mac. “We were trying to convince Apple for quite
some time but they’re so super-secretive. We definitely will support it.”
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