Sun Microsystems grabbed all the attention
Wednesday at Oracle
OpenWorld in San Francisco, unveiling a partnership with erstwhile rival
Dell and
Sun xVM, a family of virtualisation
products.
Both announcements were made during Sun chief executive Jonathan Schwartz'
keynote, with Michael Dell, chief executive of Dell, joining Schwartz on stage.
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The new distribution
agreement will see the Solaris operating system officially supported on Dell
PowerEdge servers for the first time. Dell will also be able to offer support
packages to Solaris users.
"A third of Solaris users are running Dell systems," Schwartz said. "Our
customers love working with Dell, and this is an opportunity that began from the
customer base. The big message is you've got a lot more choice this year than
last year."
Dell added, "Our customers want better support for Solaris, so it's greater
choice for customers."
During a press panel briefing after the keynote, Schwartz said the agreement
will improve support programs for Solaris enterprise users. "If you're a bank
and you have a big Solaris deployment on Dell, you can now call Dell. We've also
formalised the process for connecting to the Sun back line if necessary to do
work such as patching." He added that the previous rivalry between Sun and Dell
was part of the firm's "history", and that Sun would not benefit from telling
its customers they had made a mistake buying Dell hardware.
During his keynote, Schwartz also unveiled the Sun xVM family of datacentre
virtualisation products. The xVM Server is a hypervisor based on development
work from the Xen open-source community, and this is supported by xVM Ops
Center, a console that lets firms manage their virtual and physical datacentre
resources from a single point.
Schwartz said that the advantage of its virtualisation offering over existing
products was the ecosystem of products around it, including a file and storage
system, a robust network virtualisation system and a diagnostics tool – and the
fact that the products are freely available.
xVM will run on x86/64 and Sparc systems from vendors such as Dell, HP and
Sun. Firms will be able to deploy the hypervisor free of charge, but can choose
to sign up for paid support programs once it is implemented, according to Rich
Green, executive vice president of software at Sun.
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