Security & Management

May 2006 - Posts

System Center Virtual Machine Manager Beta

Microsoft System Center Virtual Machine Manager is the latest addition to the System Center family of management products and provides centralized management of Windows Virtual Machine infrastructure. Virtual Machine Manager enables increased physical server utilization, centralized management of virtual infrastructure and rapid provisioning of new virtual machines by the administrator and end users.

Overview

Register for the Beta

 

Posted: Tue, May 23 2006 8:29 by daniel | with no comments
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74-139 BDD Solution Accelerator Exam

I took the 74-139 BDD Solution Accelerator partner exam today.

And i got 1000 marks (full marks). =)

I'm very happy about it. The exam focus on BDD Standard Edition and Lite Touch Installation.

Why don't it focus on Zero Touch Deployment, Zero Touch Provisioning and SMS OSD? =.="

 

 

Posted: Mon, May 22 2006 15:03 by daniel | with 4 comment(s)
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Microsoft in talks to buy Softricity

Microsoft is in talks to buy application virtualisation software vendor Softricity of Boston, USA CRN has learned.

"It's coming down to the final stretches," said one source close to Microsoft who is familiar with the discussions. "It's not a done deal yet but it's just last minute haggling kind of stuff."

That's not all. At its hardware conference for OEMs next week, Microsoft is expected to announce plans to accelerate the delivery of its homegrown virtualisation hypervisor code-named "Viridian" and will formally debut plans for a virtualisation management platform code-named Carmine.

The deal with Softricity - which hit the rumor mill earlier this week - is expected to be finished before the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) in Seattle next week. Sources say Microsoft at WinHEC also will unveil Virtual DLL, a feature for Windows Vista developed in conjunction with Softricity.

The feature will not enable full application virtualisation offered by Softricity's SoftGid platform but it will allow users to virtualise application registries and "end DLL hell once and for all," one source said.

"I know Microsoft has been talking to Softricity and has worked with engineers at Softricity," said another source familiar with the joint development work on Virtual DLL by the two software companies.

"It allows you to have a virtual registry instead of a single registry so you have can have multiple DLLs sitting on the registry," he continued. "The benefit for us is to remove application conflicts. With this, you can have Office 97 and Office 2003 on the same machine."

Softricity did not respond to CRN calls for comment. A Microsoft spokesperson said only that the company does not comment on "speculation."

Sources say they are not surprised about the deal with Softricity, a former Citrix ISV that has quickly emerged as a key Microsoft ISV partner over the past six months.

At Microsoft Management Summit last month, Microsoft highlighted Softricity's new SoftGrid 4.0 for Systems Management Server 2003, which allows IT managers to virtualise Windows applications on the fly from within the management platform.

The flurry of activity in Microsoft's virtualisation unit comes as VMware - the market leader in the explosive virtualisation software market - is expected to announce availability of its next generation ESX Server 3.0 and VirtualCenter 2 platform during the first week of June.

In addition to its application virtualization push with Softricity, Microsoft will try to slow adoption of VMware's platform by announcing a stepped up delivery plan for Viridian, sources told CRN.

Microsoft plans to put Viridian into private beta with a limited number of partners sometime in the fourth quarter, sources said.

The hypervisor, which will replace its standalone Virtual Server product, was originally planned to be integrated into Windows Longhorn Server in 2006. That server is now due to ship in the second half of 2007.

But company executives later amended that plan and said Viridian would be in the R2 release of the Longhorn server. R2 is not expected to be available until 2009 or 2010.

Sources said Microsoft is speeding up its Viridian plans and pushing forward on its virtualisation management plans and application virtualisation efforts to appease corporate customers that want a VMware-like platform but don't want to wait much longer.

Microsoft is very worried because corporate customers are really pressuring the company to step it up or they will go to VMware, sources said, noting Microsoft's recent agreement to license its virtual Hard Disk format to XenSource - an open source company.

Source: http://www.itnews.com.au/newsstory.aspx?CIaNID=32786

Posted: Fri, May 19 2006 15:47 by daniel | with no comments
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