VMware,
the current leader in the virtualisation arena, claimed today that it is unfazed
by
Microsoft's
unveiling of its rival
Hyper-V
platform.
Richard Garsthagen, EMEA product marketing manager for enterprise desktops at
VMware, told vnunet.com
at the
TechEd
IT Forum in Barcelona that the company's focus goes "far beyond the
virtualisation layer by addressing and solving business problems with
applications that are built on top of the virtualisation layer".
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Garsthagen cited VMware's VMotion and Site Recovery Manager as products that
use the basis of a virtualised environment to solve some of the major problems
faced by businesses of all sizes.
He also showcased VMware's distributed power management which enables
companies easily to move virtual machines onto fewer physical servers during
low-load periods and then power down the unused machines.
Garsthagen added that some customers prefer the idea of an operating
system-independent virtualisation tool as they question how strongly Microsoft
will support operating systems that are not its own.
VMware will continue to work on its hypervisor and will continue to give it
away for free. Garsthagen argued that the real benefit to customers and VMware
is the value added by applications that take advantage of the benefits of
virtualisation.
Garsthagen referred to
Oracle's
recent virtualisation announcement with
Oracle VM, maintaining
that this was an idea that VMware has been pushing for some time, what he called
a 'Just Enough Operating System'.
He explained that in deployments where a virtual or physical server is going
to run only the applications to perform a single task, there is no need for an
entire operating system to be installed as it only adds complexity and
unnecessary maintenance.
Further down the line Garsthagen sees this concept being expanded to the
point where customers can be offered virtual machines tailored to the
requirements of each specific task with little or no extraneous parts added.
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