Could vNext Be The Last Nail in VMware’s Coffin?
Microsoft, SCVMM, Technology, VMWare, Virtual Server, Virtualisation, Virtualization No Comments »
As many of you will recall, I wrote a controversial post about VMware’s future in the virtualisation market. And, after quite a few discussions with Microsoft folks, fellow partner organisations and the end user community at the Dublin Wave Launch event this week, I have to question if Virtual Machine Manager v2 (codename: vNext) could be the last nail in the coffin for VMware’s dominance in the virtualisation market.
You see, I’ve been privileged to work with the product group over the past couple of weeks to get bits and pieces of the forthcoming solution to present during my three sessions on Managing Virtualisation at the Wave Launch. In a nutshell, here’s what you’re look at in the next version of Virtual Machine Manager:
- Cross-platform support for Virtual Server 2005, Hyper-v and VMWare.
- A single pane of glass to monitor all your virtual machines
- Intelligent Placement capabilities across all your VM hosts
- Automated maintenance and management using PowerShell scripts for all your VM hosts
- Centralised Library of all your VMs, ISOs, VHDs, Scripts, and Templates.
- Self-Provisioning of Virtual Machines using Templates and Quotas.
- Unified management experience of all your Virtual Center and VMM infrastructures.
Now, that’s only part of the story. When you combine other award-winning System Center technologies like Operations Manager 2007, Configuration Manager 2007 and Data Protection Manager 2007, what you have is a complete suite of life-cycle management solutions that can carry a system from cradle to grave. That, my friends, is something you will not find from any competitive virtualisation solution.
If you want to go the route of virtualising your environment, please give a moment’s pause to consider whether you are buying a "point solution" that does only one thing or whether you want to buy into a full lifecycle management solution for not only the physical host, but also for the virtual machines running on those host and the applications running within those virtualised instances.
As Tom Bittman, VP & Analyst with Gartner, stated:
Virtualisation without good management is more dangerous than not using virtualisation in the first place.
Ask yourself the questions:
Once you’ve deployed a virtual server into production…
- How will you patch the OS?
- How will you update the SQL Server to the latest Service Pack?
- How will you supply updates to custom applications?
- How will you back up that live server with zero data loss?
- How will you monitor the Exchange role that is hosted on that virtual server?
- How will you make sure that not only the IIS instance of that virtual server is running but that end users can actually connect to it properly?
- How are you going to deploy other virtual machines?
- How will you ensure that their desired state will be maintained through the life of the system?
These are just a few of the things that a complete solution like the family of System Center products will offer you.
If you don’t have good answers to those questions, then please don’t buy a point solution just to say you’re virtualising servers. Buy a solution that fits your lifecycle management strategy. And, today… that solution is Microsoft System Center: Your systems {managed}.

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