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Coming soon: Virtualized iPhones

Coming soon: Virtualized iPhones

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 16 Sep 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

VMware executives offer a sneak peek into the future of desktop virtualization while one analyst predicts the market will be small. Find out how the vendor is addressing the issue of storage management

LAS VEGAS -- VMware Inc.’s vClient initiative may be compelling but one industry analyst wonders how many users will require their desktop environment on portable devices.

The vClient initiative, announced this week at the 10th annual VMWorld conference, is designed to give users one view of all their data and applications on different devices, and is endorsed by major hardware vendors like Fujitsu-Siemens, HP and NEC.

Though CEO Paul Maritz did not elaborate on the implementation for smart phones and handheld devices, he did say the firm plans to include vClient versions for mobile hardware in the future.

vClient includes VMware View, designed to make user profiles and applications available on different devices, including Windows and Macintosh.

“People who have BlackBerrys, they have desktops, there’s clearly a group of people who will pay a significant amount of money for that,” said David Floyer, co-founder of the Wikibon project, a Mountain View, Calif.-based firm that publishes research online.

“But I’m not sure of the fundamental value proposition.”

Using the iPhone as an example, Floyer said some users may dispense with the desktop and use portable devices as their primary client.

“It’s a very powerful operating system, a very powerful device,” Floyer said of the iPhone. “Maybe it’s just simpler that that becomes the PC of the future, that you obviate the need for so many devices. You pick one that’s the best fit for your lifestyle and you’ll make do with what it can do and if necessary you’ll pick another one."

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Along with vClient, VMware also announced Virtual Datacenter Operating System (VDC-OS), which includes services for infrastructure, cloud computing and storage.

One product under the VDC-OS umbrella is the Fault Tolerenace service, designed to move applications over to different hardware in the event of failure, with no downtime.

“If a machine goes down we let another physical resource in the resource pool pick it up,” said Stephen Herrod, VMware’s chief technology officer. “The idea is you run a virtual machine, you have a shadow copy kept on another site kept in perfect synchronization. You can’t have a fault tolerance that ‘kind of works.’”

Floyer said managing storage is a major issue today in managing virtual environments.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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