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Posts Tagged ‘release’

#Microsoft #Surface prices released – $499

October 16, 2012 Leave a comment

Microsoft has now released the price of the Surface RT model!

Now we’ll see how it will be received by the market. Will users buy it? Are corporations ready to adopt them as BYOD devices or will they now see a tablet that they could introduce more quickly as a part of the managed client services?

Microsoft Prices Surface Starting at $499 to Rival IPad

A lot of questions and we’ll see how it goes….

Will I buy one? Don’t think so…. Will U? But I guess that this is easier for IT to adopt as an “OK” device for different reasons I’ve heard even though I don’t necessarily agree. Stop managing the devices and the old way of thinking, manage and control the apps, data/info and IPR and ensure that you’re device independent!

//Richard

XenServer 6.1 Releases

Over the past several months, literally hundreds of people have asked me the question “When will Tampa release?”  I am pleased to announce that earlier today, “Tampa” officially reached GA as XenServer 6.1.  Within engineering, this is officially considered a “cloud centric” release.  While on the surface that would seem to indicate a lack of features for traditional server virtualization and desktop, but the reality is quite different.  When you consider that a cloud runs in a datacenter, and that cloud workloads typically translate into some pretty large VM densities, all with a requirement for a high degree of workload isolation; “cloud centric” actually translates into a set of pretty stringent performance requirements.  To illustrate the point, let’s consider three key features, live storage migration, network security and VM conversion.

When you look at some of the most successful clouds, you’ll quickly see that the concept of resource pools are somewhat limiting.  Regardless of the size of the pool, if your cloud is successful, eventually you’re going to have more customers than can fit in your cluster or pool.  During the design phase for Storage XenMotion, we accounted for this with the result being a shared nothing live storage migration solution which works equally well across all storage types and without being confined to an arbitrary resource pool concept.  While designed for the cloud, it fully supports enterprise storage management requirements, and even supports live VM migration between local storage for those cases where shared storage wasn’t implemented.

Continue reading here

//Richard