Microsoft last week said it will buy
Calista Technologies as part of
a plan to speed up adoption of virtualisation technologies.
The Calista deal will give Microsoft software that provides 3D and multimedia
capabilities for virtualised desktops, the firms said.
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Serguei Beloussov, chief executive of virtualisation firm
SWsoft, said the acquisition is “good for
every virtualisation company except Citrix”, suggesting that Citrix’s leadership
in high-performance virtual desktops through its ICA protocol will be
challenged.
But Microsoft will continue to work with, as well as challenge, Citrix. The
firms said last week that they will develop a tool for transferring virtual
machines between Citrix’s XenServer and Microsoft’s forthcoming Windows Server
2008 with Hyper-V virtualisation. Licensing terms for virtualising home versions
of Vista have also been relaxed.
The steps are intended to help take virtualisation beyond the sub-five per
cent of firms Microsoft estimates are using the technology. In a dig at x86
virtualisation pioneer VMware, Microsoft server vice president Bob Muglia said
“it is too cost-prohibitive and complex” to deploy virtualisation technologies
today.
Separately, Raxco Software will this week release a disk defragmentation tool
that can optimise virtual machines as well as the everyday files and folders
stored on computer hard drives.
PerfectDisk 2008 will be available from this week in six versions, two of
which are designed to work with VMware Workstation and VMware Server to boost
performance and reclaim disk space from virtual machine images, eliminating the
need for administrators to perform these tasks manually on individual virtual
machines.
“We are optimising the entire process by defragmenting the virtual machines,
re-indexing VMware internal data structures, and also shrinking the VMware
drives to reclaim free space,” said Raxco vice president of operations Joe Abus-
amra. “The physical [host] machine’s drives are also automatically defragmented
and optimised.”
PerfectDisk optimises virtual machines in accordance with VMware’s
recommendations, Raxco said, and only needs to be installed and run on the host
system.
PerfectDisk 2008 for VMware Workstation costs $100 (£51) for a single PC,
while PerfectDisk 2008 for VMware Server starts at $200 (£102) for a single
physical server licence. There are no restrictions on the number of virtual
machines.
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