A random blogger recently made a rather 
stunning 
  prediction
: That Xen is as good as dead. His logic? Citrix, which bought 
  Xen, is so wedded to Microsoft that it will kill Xen in favor of Hyper-V. 
I interviewed Citrix chief Mark Templeton for the premiere issue of Virtualization 
  Review magazine (you can check out the article here). 
  The interview came just as Microsoft and Citrix were announcing a multiyear 
  cooperation agreement over virtualization. The deal calls for both companies 
  to support each others' hypervisors, Hyper-V and Xen, and work on interoperability. 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 10, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    We've been talking a lot about Microsoft's challenges in Web services. This 
  is an area we explore in our recent 
Redmond 
  magazine cover story
 where we conclude that on the enterprise side, Microsoft 
  has done a fine job turning server-bound tools like Exchange into software services. 
  We saw less progress on the consumer side -- the space where Google happily 
  resides. 
 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 09, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    With Steve Ballmer's 
continued 
  push
 to overthrow the Yahoo board, Doug asked readers yesterday whether 
  buying Yahoo is even a good idea. Here's what some of you had to say:
   Should Ballmer buy Yahoo? Simple answer: NO!
    -Anonymous
  This makes no sense at all. You have an open source culture in one company 
    and one of the most proprietary cultures in another. Also, the DOJ should 
    can this deal as being bad for consumers -- one less chat system out there. 
    For as bad as "Yahell" is claimed to be, it has features no one 
    else has; it just doesn't leverage them via advertising very well. Then you 
    also have overlap in the online ad industry. 
  This should not be allowed -- period.
    -Bruce
  When I bought my 100 shares of Yahoo five or six years ago and saw it 
    split two for one a year or so later, I thought I had boarded the gravy train. 
    I've seen nothing since. So what have I got to look forward to? Maybe it would 
    be nice to exchange my Yahoo for MS. I'd be willing if they offered -- just 
    to have something different now.
    -Steve
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 09, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft last week added a new element to its already sprawling array of licensing 
  options. 
Select 
  Plus Volume Licensing
 is a new wrinkle for the Select program. 
The key features? There's one ID for the entire company and, by unifying buying, 
  it should make it easier to earn discounts.
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 09, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft isn't a company known for giving up easily -- and in the case of 
  Yahoo, it's still stubbornly gunning for a deal. 
You probably recall that after Ballmer’s $40 billion-plus bid was rejected, 
  Microsoft gave up the chase, only to see Carl Icahn start to buy 
  up shares, manipulate 
  the board, try 
  to get the deal done with Microsoft, and then cash in on the premium Microsoft 
  would have to pay.
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 08, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Hopefully you all had a relaxing long holiday weekend, but now it's back to 
  the grind. And today 
is 
  patching time again
 as Microsoft plans to roll out four fixes. 
Fortunately, they're all only "important," which is far less serious 
  than "critical."
SQL Server is getting protection against elevation-of-privilege attacks, and 
  Microsoft continues to plug remote code execution flaws.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 08, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft has long known it had a security problem with Internet Explorer, and 
  it has struggled mightily to fix it. The company now argues that IE 8, now in 
  beta, will be 
far 
  more secure
 than any of its predecessors. 
Chief among the protections are a way to stop cross-site scripting exploits, 
  and safer surfing of social networking Web sites. There are also ways to keep 
  hackers from jumping from an individual PC to the entire network. 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 08, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Readers chime in on a grab-bag of topics -- the 
Hyper-V 
  debate
 that isn't, the pros and cons of cloud computing, and Bill Gates' 
  
post-retirement 
  plans
:
   Here's what has been annoying me about this Hyper-V versus VMware "debate": 
    There's nothing to debate! People are approaching this as though Microsoft 
    should be eviscerated for coming out with a 1.0 product -- how dare they! 
    You mean Hyper-V version 1.0 doesn't match up feature-for-feature with ESX, 
    a product that VMware has been working on for years? Well, that's no surprise, 
    and I'm a bit astounded that people are acting so vehemently about this.
   I for one am excited about Hyper-V. It's apparently targeted precisely 
    at a shop my size. We have about 12 servers and around four or five of them 
    are ready to be replaced so, for me, Hyper-V looks a lot more attractive than 
    spending thousands on ESX features I don't need. We may someday need a more 
    robust product, fine, but for the time being, I think Hyper-V is going to 
    be just what the doctor ordered. So I wish people would get off their soapboxes 
    and use whichever product suits them and leave everyone else alone to do the 
    same thing.
    -Greg
  There is no choice in the browser wars! There are too many sites and devices 
    on the Internet that do not play well with any browser but Internet Explorer. 
    Our corporate HR Web site will not even let a user log in with a browser other 
    that Internet Explorer.
   Firefox is my default browser at home. It's fast, clean and functional. 
    I use it for everything except the corporate stuff (and my Web cam). I have 
    never been hijacked or seen a drive-by download using it. But I have been 
    asked to clean more than my share of computers when the users (running IE), 
    despite having AV and anti-spyware software installed, get stuck with a useless 
    machine due to Internet pop-ups and browser hijacking.
    -Tom
  I love cloud computing for my own business and I am sure that others who 
    try will, too. But there is a downside: Customisation is real tricky. So yes, 
    I agree, the clouds are approaching fast, but once in the cloud, your business 
    better fit the model or you are not going to be able to fine-tune your business 
    model at all, wasting any savings that you might make.
    -Garry
  Perhaps I simply have a firm grasp of the obvious reason Billy Boy allegedly 
    "retired": He is taking over the programming aspect of Microsoft 
    once again, where he started, to be sure the next OS is not the embarrassment 
    that Vista is, and will continue to be. Vista is to Windows 7 what Windows 
    ME was to Windows XP -- simply a test product at the consumer's expense. After 
    all, the stock price of Microsoft has dropped and he is no longer the wealthiest 
    man on this planet. Ouch!
    -R.M.
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 08, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I don't use Internet Explorer even though it's still installed on my computer 
  (this thing is dang impossible to take off!). I switched years ago to Firefox 
  before IE 7 came out with tabs, and because Firefox is arguably the safer browser. 
  Plus, it's just cooler -- like an iPod versus a Zune. 
But was that the right choice? Well, according to a new 
  report, it was dead-on. IE is more vulnerable. 
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on July 02, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Yesterday
, 
  I started an item about Bill Gates by saying, "Unless you were living in 
  a bio-dome or were in a Nick Hogan-induced coma, you must have heard that Bill 
  Gates retired last week."
Redmond Report reader Chris took offense and had this to say: 
  "Bad taste, Mr. Barney. I could see that coming from a young staff 
    writer, but not from an editor in chief."
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 02, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    On Monday, Doug 
posted 
  a letter
 from reader Mark who was less than enthusiastic about Hyper-V. 
  Here are some more of your thoughts on the Microsoft hypervisor:
   Sounds like he has a axe to grind. Hyper-V demonstrates a much more mature 
    software product than the pre 1.0 that the reviewer exclaims. I have found 
    Hyper-V to be an extremely stable and flexible product with a full Windows 
    2008 install or with a Server Core, the latter being much more locked down 
    and hacker-safe.
   In the next year or two, this product will have "world-class" 
    written all over it.
    -Howard 
  The issue at hand is that everyone (including Microsoft) is comparing 
    this product to VMware ESX. Just because they strip the Start menu out of 
    the OS to make Server Core, doesn't mean this is a bare-bones hypervisor. 
    It's merely an evolution of Virtual Server allowing deeper penetration into 
    VMware-entrenched territory. Now with the use of clustering, you can perform 
    cold migrations and have the ability to use a ridiculous amount of processors 
    in a VM.
   There are other more glaring problems than killing a host through the 
    parent partition -- like not being able to over-commit the level of RAM or 
    iSCSI-only support. Hyper-V is a good ESX 1.0 competitor but no one will take 
    it seriously until you get those two limitations straightened out, along with 
    Live Migration.
    -Lee
  I have been using Hyper-V for about two months with few problems except 
    for the following:
  
    -  NO support for wireless adapters. Yes, you may argue that there is 
      no place for wireless in a server environment, but what about us developers 
      who emulate the complete client system on our laptops? I have been told 
      that the reason is that Microsoft can not clone the MAC address of the wireless 
      -- but it worked with Virtual PC!
 
    -  Still no USB support.
 
  
   As to running out of resources on the root/parent machine, that has never 
    been a problem. I have configured it as core and not used the core machine 
    for anything (other than Hyper-V). Bottom line, I think it is a good product 
    and will become even better when Exchange 2007 is certified to run on Hyper-V.
    -Tim
  VMware Enterprise has many very cool features that Hyper-V lacks, but 
    the reality is that Hyper-V is version 1 and really cheap to buy and use! 
    For a test environment, it works great and is easy to use and set up. Heck, 
    VMware now gives some of its products away for free in reaction to/anticipation 
    of Microsoft's entry to the virtualization market.
   The writing is on the wall for VMware. By the time Hyper-V is in rev 
    3 or 4, it will be able to support enterprise virtualization very well. Why 
    pay 5K a processor for VMware Enterprise when you can get it much cheaper 
    in Windows? Why hire a VMware OS expert when anyone that can admin Windows 
    can admin Hyper-V?
    -Chris
  I'm planning to try Hyper-V as a small computer science experiment so 
    that I can run Vista and XP in parallel. Toward this end, I built a new machine. 
    I've installed Vista Ultimate on this machine while waiting for the Hyper-V 
    RTM and discovered that it does a good job of supporting the hardware the 
    Vista analyzer said wouldn't be supported (Epson Perfection 1650 scanner and 
    ATI HDTV Wonder). But even so, I want to continue with my experiment to see 
    what happens and possibly write up my experience for the benefit of others. 
    This is going to be a budget project; I got Vista Ultimate and a one-year 
    Windows 2008 trial from Microsoft for free. Now my wait for Hyper-V is over 
    and I'm ready to start. 
   But where to start? This is the purpose of this e-mail. Do I have to 
    build a new system from scratch, starting with Win08, reinstall Vista, etc.? 
    Or can I "import" an existing installation of Vista and install 
    a new version of XP? And what do I do with the downloadable images Microsoft 
    provides? Should I use a core Win08 60-day trial and just extend it three 
    more times as Microsoft suggests? Then can I update that install with my one-year 
    trial product key? Can I extend my one-year trial three times? Does virtualization 
    share peripheral hardware (i.e., NICs) or do I really need to have two machines 
    worth of hardware on one motherboard? It doesn't seem likely that two OSes 
    can share the same MAC/IP address, I must admit, but that would be quite a 
    problem if I wanted to run 12 OSes as "astute reader Mark" desires 
    to do. 
   Keep the info coming. I'm indeed about as giddy as Mark suggests but 
    I'm not going to let his comments spoil my buzz. I can see from his comments 
    why an actual server administrator might be a bit less than over-enthused 
    by Hyper-V 1.0. If I can get just XP Pro and Vista Ultimate to coexist, I'll 
    be one happy camper.
    -Eric 
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on July 02, 20080 comments