Saturday Jun 28, 2008

Recent Coverage - June 27th, 2008[Read More]
Recent Coverage - June 25th, 2008[Read More]

Wednesday Jun 25, 2008

Here's a nice blog which covers one of the unique features of VirtualBox, the built-in RDP server. Using VRDP to view VirtualBox virtual machines -FB
Recent Coverage - June 26th, 2008[Read More]
Recent Coverage - June 24th, 2008[Read More]

Tuesday Jun 24, 2008

Recent Coverage - June 23th, 2008[Read More]

Every day, in almost every continent, someone is blogging or writing or making a movie about VirtualBox.

To track this buzz in the community we've created a new "Blogosphere coverage" category on this blog and we'll be posting regular updates of the coverage that we see on an almost daily basis.

We're putting these posts into their own category so you can choose to track or ignore the (expected) bombardment of posts over here.

So if you do want to tap into this energy stream click on the RSS feed icon for "Blogosphere coverage" feed over on the right hand side of this page.

- FB

VirtualBox is highly popular among end users, found on over five million desktops already. Recently, I observed a discussion about VirtualBox and what it can be used for. Eventually it turned into a dispute whether it's suitable for server deployments. "VirtualBox is for the secretary whereas *** is for the data center because ..... well, because." Is it true that VirtualBox does not target server deployments and other products such as Sun xVM Server or VMware ESX should be used for running virtual machines on server hardware?

Well, yes and no. VirtualBox in reality is much more than a simple to use end user product. The way you download it from virtualbox.org, it's a distribution containing (among other things) a hypervisor, virtual device modules, an RDP server and an application programming interface (API) on top of which we've developed a nice and simple to use graphical interface. Our distribution is perfect for end users but it just being a distribution, it means that everyone is able to take the pieces and assemble them in a different way and create a new distribution.

We have lots of customers that benefit from VirtualBox as the only truly modular virtualization software and build their own products on top of VirtualBox. Some of them implement their own virtual PCI cards, others integrate VirtualBox with web interfaces they've developed. With its high performance, integrated RDP server and API, VirtualBox is ideally suited to be the heart of solutions for VDI (virtual desktop infrastructure) and we have customers marketing VirtualBox based VDI software that can run hundreds of desktops on a single server.

Now when looking at high end server workloads, I have to admit that VirtualBox doesn't have all the features imaginable. We do not support 64-bit guests, we only present one CPU to each guest (but we do make use of all cores) and we can't transfer a running virtual machine from one server to another (live migration). That might be not enough for some scenarios but you will be surprised how little time will pass until those features become available...

Monday Jun 23, 2008

There are some great VirtualBox technology bloggers out there, too many to mention by name or pseudonym.

But experiments have shown the existence of VirtualBox Dark Matter. This is expressed by the equation:

  Σ (VirtualBox Knowledge) > Blogs + Wikis + Forums + YouTube

In order to prise this Dark Matter out of people's heads and get it into the public domain we've created this group blog. This is for anyone to contribute anything they want, no matter how large or how small, about the World's most popular Open Source virtualization platform for Windows, Mac OS X, OpenSolaris, Solaris and Linux.

You may feel you don't have enough content to fill your own blog, or you may be a compulsive blogger. Whatever your persuasion, we now offer this new VirtualBox soapbox up to you.

Come along, stand up and Blog!

This blog copyright 2009 by Sun Microsystems, Inc.