VMware Upgrade Makes Management Strides
Peek inside the recent upgrade to ESX Server 3.5 and VirtualCenter 2.5, and you'll find maintenance-minded new features including patch management, live migration of VM disks, and a capacity planning wizard.
Overall, VMware's ESX 3.5 and VirtualCenter 2.5 release represents a logical next step, a necessary evolution of the flagship product. It brings some significant features to the table, and the nature of the VI3 licensing model coupled with the ease of upgrading will lure most users to upgrade quickly.
The next step for VMware is harder: deeper, hypervisor-level integration with third-party solutions to handle things like network packet inspection and application filtering and virus scanning at the instruction level. Also, considering VirtualCenter's new plug-in architecture and VMware's recent acquisition of Thinstall, the next version of VMware Infrastructure may leverage virtualized application delivery, which will have a significant impact on VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure). For example, instead of installing Microsoft Office into hundreds or thousands of Windows XP VMs, those applications could potentially be delivered to those VMs as needed, significantly reducing the storage requirements, the backup costs, and so on down the line.
VMware certainly has the most mature, stable, and expensive x86 virtualization product the world has ever seen. But there's lots more to be done, and many more bridges to be crossed. This is still just the very beginning.
© IDG 2009
VMware
Find out what vendors offer the products you need.
View the Vendor Matrix »



