Windows Server 2008 'over-complicates' virtualisation?

Microsoft officially launched Windows Server 2008, Windows Visual Studio 2008, and announced SQL Server 2008, which is due in the third quarter of this year.

The three main versions of Windows Server 2008 will be Standard, Enterprise and Datacentre, which all include the Hyper-V virtualisation hypervisor.

Hyper-V is a key element of Microsoft's virtualisation strategy and is included in beta form in the release version of Windows Server 2008. Microsoft says that within 180 days, the production Hyper-V will be released and distributed online through the auto-update system.

As well as Hyper-V's OS-level virtualisation, Microsoft has labelled other services as virtualisation components. Terminal Services now provides "Presentation virtualisation" and thin-client access to server-based applications, while "Profile virtualisation" involves loading a working environment onto a client over the network. Application and desktop virtualisation are also included, with all types managed by Microsoft System Center.

Larry Orecklin, general manager for the server and tools division of Microsoft, told ZDNet.com.au's sister site ZDNet.co.uk that this was wasn't over-complicating the definition of virtualisation.

"The different profiles cover the different situations in which you will use virtualisation," he said. Virtualisation of storage was different from server virtualisation. "You will have different requirements and these different ways of looking at virtualisation are covered."

Although VMware is one of Microsoft's major competitors, Oreckin said, System Center would support VMware and XenSource, the open-source virtualisation company now owned by Citrix, among other third-party products.

At the UK launch on Wednesday, Microsoft had a number of prominent UK users for the company's new products including the recruitment agency Reed, EasyJet and the University of Cambridge.

Dr Andrew Hopkirk, head of projects at the National Computing Centre, was also at the event and praised the problem-solving ability of virtualisation. He said it can help to deal with the challenge of "complexity, agility, security and manageability in enterprise computing".

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Talkback 2 comments

  1. too many buzzwords Thomas W -- 04/05/08

    Sounds over-complicated.

    Too many buzzwords, is likely to mean minimal real value. It probably doesn't work, anyway.

    Re-evaluate it a year perhaps, or go with another vendor's solution or another OS if you actually need it now.

  2. server apps should not be MS-specific Thomas W -- 04/05/08

    None of your enterprise apps & nothing you deploy on your server, should be MS-specific anyway.

    Anything that's not portable, will obsolete & a wrong decision in 2 years -- if it isn't obsolete today.

    Look at Apache, Tomcat, Java, Linux, J2EE -- think servers & services as a *commodity*. Not an overpriced source of unreliability.

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