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Volume 3, Number 42 -- November 7, 2006

VMware, XenSource Push Out Beta Virtualization Products

Published: November 7, 2006

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

Server and workstation virtualization software specialist VMware is hosting its VMworld 2006 customer event starting tomorrow, and one of the products it plans to roll out is called VMware Lab Manager, a tool for assisting in the development and testing of applications that it got through acquisition the acquisition of Akimbi Systems back in June. And, to be somewhat of a spoiler, this is also when rival XenSource will launch support for Microsoft's Windows platform in the XenEnterprise collection of hypervisor and management tools that competes with VMware's ESX Server and related Infrastructure 3 management tools.

While VMware's customer and partner event is sure to draw a big crowd because of the popularity of server virtualization these days, the company has not yet divulged any big product announcements for this week. VMware Lab Manager 2.4 is a rebranded version of the Akimbi Slingshot quality assurance and testing tool. With the 2.4 release, which went into private beta during the third quarter and which is now in a general public beta as of this week, VMware is integrating the Slingshot tools into the Infrastructure 3 hypervisor and virtualization management tools as well as into the VMware Workstation product that developers like to use to host multiple operating systems on their machines for development and testing. VMware Workstation had some pretty sophisticated capability in terms of creating multiple images, but the Akimbi product creates what amounts to a virtual machine recording and jukebox system that allows coders to create lots and lots of virtual machines and different software stacks within them and deploy them rapidly to test application code.

VMware Lab Manager will be generally available by the end of the year. The software will cost $15,000, plus $500 for each additional CPU that it manages virtual machines upon. This is a very pricey product, and that explains why VMware wanted to acquire Akimbi to be able to sell it.

XenSource has already announced that it was shipping its XenEnterprise mix environment hypervisor and tools in August to support Linux variants, and today it will announce that support for Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP is available in the product. The Windows support requires hardware that support Intel's VT or Advanced Micro Devices' AMD-V hardware-assisted virtualization electronics within the processors that support XenEnterprise. XenSource says that Windows support is available for beta and paid pilots, and will be generally available in December. Virtualization support for Windows 2000 guests on the Xen 3.0.3 hypervisor within XenEnterprise in the first quarter of 2007. XenEnterprise costs $488 for an annual subscription on a two-socket server and $750 for a perpetual license.


RELATED STORIES

Akimbi Leverages Virtualization for QA Testing

XenSource Begins Shipping XenEnterprise Hypervisor



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Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Kevin Vandever,
Shannon O'Donnell, Victor Rozek, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Microsoft and Novell in Landmark Partnership

Bang for the Buck: Entry Linux Servers Keep Windows and Unix Honest

Liquid Computing Starts Shipping LiquidIQ Servers

The X Factor: Form Follows Function

But Wait, There's More:


Novell Appoints Presidents of North American, Asia/Pacific Regions . . . Supermicro to Go Public, and Rackable Systems Show Why . . . VMware, XenSource Push Out Beta Virtualization Products . . . IBM Creates Virtualization Dashboard, Merges Server and Storage Management . . . IDC Says Virtual Tape Library Sales to Double in Five Years . . . EMC Claims Thermal Dominance in High-End SANs . . .

The Linux Beacon

BACK ISSUES

The Four Hundred
Thoma Cressey Strikes Again: Buys iTera to Merge with Vision Solutions

Bang for the Buck: User-Capped i5 520s Versus Windows X64 Servers

PowerTech Issues Third Annual State of i5/OS Security Report

The X Factor: Form Follows Function

Big Iron
HP, Intel, and Oracle Gang Up on IBM Mainframes

Top Mainframe Stories and Vendor Announcements

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

The Windows Observer
IBM Launches Service for Virtual Windows Desktop Management

Microsoft First Quarter Revenues, Profit Up 11 Percent

Liquid Computing Starts Shipping LiquidIQ Servers

The X Factor: Form Follows Function

The Unix Guardian
Sun Ponders the Future of Virtualized Solaris

Sun Builds on Growth in Fiscal Q1, But Profits Still Elude

Solaris 10 Breaks Through 6 Million Shipment Barrier

The X Factor: Form Follows Function


 
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