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Cloud computing becomes mobile

Cloud computing becomes mobile

By:  Bernard Golden  On: 18 Nov 2008 For: CIO.com (NA) Creator

Virtualization will soon send the handset to the cloud. If you're an IT organization, you need to examine your virtualization plans with a much more sophisticated eye

If the rise of cloud computing and the buzz about VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure, discussed in a recent blog posting here ) haven't demonstrated that virtualization is exploding well beyond its back-room origins, two announcements last week hammered home the point.

VMware and Citrix, two of the three largest virtualization vendors, announced initiatives to move virtualization all the way to the mobile device-just think, virtualization in your hand!

VMware's announcement was intriguing. The company purchased a small virtualization software provider called Trango a month or so ago and then last week announced it would ship a bare-metal hypervisor for ARM-powered devices like the iPhone and Blackberry.

There is a lot of promise in this; most phones that seek to allow end user customization have to use multiple chipsets: one for end-user modifiable software, and the other for software controlling mechanisms that must not be modified by end users, e.g., the software controlling the phone's radio's frequency and power. While a multiple chip solution works, it obviously increases costs and-crucially-power draw.

Now VMware is talking about putting a hypervisor on a single chip and segregating two operating systems, one for system-specific software and one for end-user software. Even more intriguing, I saw some discussion about the announcement by someone at VMware, who posited that users might have a personal OS (actually, it was referred to as a "persona," which is jargon for individual) which would migrate from device to device. Imagine, no having to enter your contacts anew for every phone or trying to get some clunky synchronization software to work properly!

This "persona" notion is intriguing because it would represent a real break from today's mobile world, where you're pretty much tied to whatever phone you happen to have: change phone and/or carrier, and everything gets tossed. It's real lock-in.

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Bernard Golden Bernard Golden is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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