At its annual OpenWorld event in San Francisco, Oracle unveiled free
open-source virtualisation software designed to help firms manage their virtual
servers.
Oracle VM is based on the Xen
hypervisor, and supports Linux and Windows
systems. It features an integrated management console that IT staff can access
via a web browser to create and manage virtual server pools.
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According to the vendor, the software is easy and quick to install – but
perhaps most attention-grabbing is the claim from Oracle that the software is
“three times more efficient that other server virtualisation products” –
although further details on the performance and competing products were not
given.
Introducing the product to the 43,000 delegates attending OpenWorld, Oracle
president Charles Phillips said, “This is our context of virtualisation. It’s a
single environment for managing virtualisation and Linux.” He added that
complexity of IT environments was one of the biggest problems still facing
customers, and so products such as Oracle VM were aimed at making it easier for
firms to gain a unified view and management point for their IT assets.
Oracle VM will be available to download for free this Wednesday from
here. For firms wanting
Oracle VM with enterprise support, per-system charges are applied.
Pricing for a system with up to two CPUs is $499 (about £250) per year per
system, while for unlimited CPUs this increases to $999 (about £500) per year.
Speaking at a UK customer and partner panel at OpenWorld, Ronan Miles, head
of the UK Oracle User Group, said he thought
Oracle VM was the "biggest announcement" of the show. "I was quite surprised by
the virtualisation move – and by the lack of response from the audience," he
added.
However, Angela Murphy, head of ICT at UK construction company City Building,
said, "Virtualisation is just not something of interest to us at the moment."
This view was echoed by the other panel members, who agreed that
virtualisation's status as a hot topic did not mean it was in widespread use at
companies.
Most of the panel members highlighted licensing and support as issues that
Oracle still needed to address. However, they all supported Oracle's focus on
consolidation and integration, the key themes of the event.
"Integration is painful for us, so if Oracle can solve that, it's a good
thing," said Richard Down, technical governance authority at
Vodafone
UK. "Vodafone would definitely like to deal with fewer suppliers but whether
we go down Oracle's integrated route for every application would depend on the
pull between business requirements and commercial incentives – for example if we
got a big discount as we use a lot of Oracle."
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