Breaking News - Platforms:
Microsoft Announces General Availability Of Virtual Server 2005
Microsoft Corp announced the general availability and pricing of Microsoft
Virtual Server 2005. Available in both Standard and Enterprise editions,
Virtual Server 2005 helps customers reduce hardware costs and increase
operational efficiency in three key scenarios: automation of software test and
development environments; rehosting of legacy applications; and consolidation
of production server workloads such as networking, directory infrastructure or
departmental applications. As a key deliverable of the Dynamic Systems
Initiative, Microsoft's vision for simplifying and automating the way
customers design, deploy and operate distributed systems, Virtual Server 2005
provides customers with more flexibility and control in the provisioning of
data center resources.
"Our customers are looking for ways to cut infrastructure costs and make
better use of their IT and development teams. They want to streamline
application testing and development, consolidate to fewer servers and move
legacy applications to new hardware running on the Windows Server 2003
platform," said Bob Muglia, senior vice president of the Windows Server
Division at Microsoft. "Virtual Server 2005 meets these needs and provides
easy, automated deployment and configuration. This improved efficiency and
simplicity represents progress toward our Dynamic Systems Initiative vision of
reducing IT complexity."
As part of Windows Server System, Microsoft's comprehensive family of server
software, Virtual Server 2005 helps customers increase operational
efficiencies associated with testing and deploying their solutions built on
Windows Server 2003. With Virtual Server 2005, early adopter customers have
been able to decrease their server provisioning time by 50 percent to 95
percent, while reducing physical server counts by 50 percent to 80 percent
through consolidation.
"Virtual Server 2005 will allow us to get out of the one-application, one-
server paradigm when dealing with applications with low system requirements,"
said Eric Hart, senior network engineer at PING Golf. "We will be able to
consolidate 77 percent of these applications in our datacenter. Now we have
the ability to provide a scalable, fault-tolerant and hardware-independent
solution for deploying single-server applications in a cost-effective manner."
Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 includes simple installation and convenient
Web-based management of virtual machines, as well as robust storage and
networking features. In addition, physical server management tools from
Microsoft and third-party management vendors have been updated to provide
administrators with a seamless one-to-many management experience across a
combination of physical and virtual servers. For example, a Virtual Server
2005 Management Pack for Microsoft Operations Manager 2005 will enable
centralized monitoring and performance management of multiple virtual and
physical servers.
Hardware vendors such as AMD, Dell, Fujitsu Siemens, HP, IBM, Intel, NEC and
Unisys; systems integrators such as Accenture, Avanade, EDS, HP Services and
IBM Global Services; and management software vendors including CA, HP and
VERITAS, are offering a broad choice of tools, solutions and guidance to help
customers more easily deploy and manage Virtual Server 2005 on Windows Server
2003.
"Gartner predicts that enterprises that don't leverage virtualization
technologies will spend as much as 25 percent more for their x86 servers,"
said Tom Bittman, research vice president at Gartner Inc. "Server
virtualization software can help enterprises reduce the time, effort and costs
associated with the consolidation of servers and applications."
|