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Microsoft continues on virtualization roadmap

Microsoft continues on virtualization roadmap

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 10 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Microsoft continues take on VMWare with a bevy of virtualization-related software and service announcements. Sun, Citrix and Virtual Iron have signed up for its server validation program and analyst Dan Kusnetzky weighs in on the news

At this week’s Tech Ed conference in Orlando, Microsoft Corp. reaffirmed its commitment to its Dynamic IT initiative with a host of virtualization announcements aimed at increasing adoption of the technology among its huge customer base. But while Microsoft’s roadmap seems like a good fit for small to medium-sized firms, one analyst warned that the vendor’s strategy could clash in some heterogeneous enterprise environments.

As part of Tuesday’s virtualization-focused announcements, Microsoft launched a program that will allow any software vendor to test and validate its virtualization software to run on any version of Windows Server. The program will offer cooperative technical support for customers running Windows Server on validated, non-Microsoft server virtualization software. The company said Citrix Systems Inc., Sun Microsystems Inc. and Virtual Iron software have already signed on with the program.

Microsoft also announced four new virtualization certifications for IT professionals, such as desktop support technicians, database administrators and Web developers, as well as a plan to include Forefront Client Security support in its forthcoming hypervisor-based server virtualization technology, Hyper-V.

Bill Hilf, general manager of platform strategy at Microsoft, said most of the company’s announcements at Tech Ed are individually connected to virtualization because of the impending release of both the new hypervisor and System Center Virtual Machine Manager later this fall.

“The main checkpoint into our vision is that we’re not just continuing to add to the capabilities of our software, but we’re also growing our ecosystem to deliver on that,” Hilf said. “We can build amazing technologies and put it into software products, but for the hundreds of thousands of IT administrators and developers out there, if there’s not a way for them to know what they’re using and validate their technologies, this stuff will be dead on arrival.”

Rounding out the laundry list of virtualization-related news from the conference was the announcement of Release Candidate 1 of Microsoft Application Virtualization 4.5 – a software tool that allows applications to be run in virtual containers on a network.

And while most analysts agree that Microsoft is one of the few companies that can present a complete view of virtualization technology, the stumbling block for Dynamic IT’s success in large enterprises could be its inability to fit in with products from other major software suppliers.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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