Microsoft has made a 'release candidate' version of its server virtualisation
software,
Hyper-V,
generally available.
Hyper-V is Microsoft's rival offering to
VMware's server virtualisation technology,
and promises to improve the utilisation rates and cost-effectiveness of
organisations' commodity server estate.
"Hyper-V will help customers consolidate IT systems and allow their
businesses to respond more rapidly to ever-changing market conditions,” said
Bill Hilf, general manager of the Windows Server Division
The release of Hyper-V adds to the cutthroat competition in the server
virtualisation market, noted Gartner analyst Thomas Bittman, in a recent
research note. He suggested that "VMware is the most-mature solution with the
richest management portfolio".
Bittman also said that Microsoft may initially struggle to match competitors
such as VMware, Citrix and Oracle. Gartner is "concerned that the Hyper-V
architecture may cause reliability, vulnerability and maintenance issues because
of its dependency on a single copy of Windows Server 2008," he added.
But Bittman suggested that Microsoft's main opportunity for Hyper-V was in
the mid-market.
The Hyper-V release candidate features an expanded list of tested and
qualified guest operating systems, including: Windows Server 2003 Service Pack
2; Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
10; Windows Vista SP1; and Windows XP SP3.
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