Release: VMware Fusion 4.0.1

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Is VMWorld still going?  It seems the entire desktop line from VMware refreshed today.  You can grab the download for Fusion 4.0.1 here.  Here’s the what’s new section from the release notes:

This release of VMware Fusion adds the following new features.

New Installation Experience

VMware Fusion is now installed by dragging and dropping to the Applications folder. Users of older versions can upgrade using the included utility. VMware Fusion can be uninstalled by quitting the application and dragging it to the trash.

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Release: VMware View 5.0

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VMware View 5.0 has been released and can be downloaded here.  For those customers using View over slow WAN connections, you are going to want to take a close look at this release.  Here’s the What’s New from the release notes:

VMware View 5.0 includes the following new features:

  • PCoIP WAN performance optimization – Improves PCoIP protocol performance in low-bandwidth WAN environments. Users who connect to their desktops over an external WAN have enhanced desktop experience.
  • Support for 3D graphics on vSphere 5.0 – This feature provides View desktops with vGPU graphics enablement available on vSphere 5.0 platforms. View users can take advantage of desktop graphics enhancements provided by AERO (such as peek, shake, and Flip 3D) and the 3D capabilities of Windows Office 2010 (such as picture editing, slide transitions and animations, presentation-to-video conversion, video embedding, editing, and 3D rotations).
  • View Persona Management – The View Persona Management feature manages user profiles in a secure and centralized environment. (User profiles include user data and settings, application data and settings, and Windows registry settings configured by user applications.) View Persona Management allows IT organizations to simplify and automate the capture and management of a user’s persona while providing a rich user experience. View Persona Management offers the following benefits:
    • Provides a user profile that is independent of the virtual desktop. When a user logs in to any desktop, the same profile appears.
    • Lets you configure and manage personas entirely within View. You do not have to configure Windows roaming profiles.
    • Expands functionality and improves performance compared to Windows roaming profiles.
    • Minimizes login impact by downloading only the files that Windows requires, such as user registry files. Other files are copied to the local desktop when the user or an application opens them from the local profile folder.
    • Copies recent changes in the local profile to a remote profile repository at configurable intervals, typically once every few minutes.
  • Updated client certificate checking for View clients – View clients now follow the well-known browser model for handling certificates, displaying errors detected in the certificate presented by View Connection Server, or in the certificate trust chain. Administrators can set the Certificate verification mode group policy to enforce strict certificate checking; if any certificate error occurs, the user cannot connect to View Connection Server. Alternatively, administrators can use the default Warn But Allow mode, which supports self-signed server certificates and lets users connect to View Connection Server with certificates that have expired or are not yet valid. If necessary, administrators can also set a No Security mode that lets users connect without certificate checking.
  • Support for vSphere 5.0
  • Support for hardware v8 – Remote View desktops can be hardware v8 virtual machines. Hardware v8 is not supported for desktops that run in local mode.
  • Removed support for HP RGS display protocol
  • Localization support for Korean. – View Client and the documentation, online help, and release notes are available in Korean.

Note: The version of View Client for Mac that was bundled with View 4.6 is also bundled with the View 5.0 release. This is the latest View Client for Mac and is compatible with View 4.6 and View 5.0.

 

Release: VMware vCloud Director 1.5

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This one’s for the Lab Manager Customers!  The ones who have been waiting for SQL support and linked clones!  vCloud Director 1.5 has been released and can be downloaded here.  Let’s get right to the What’s New section from the release notes:

  • Fast Provisioning: Utilizing linked clones dramatically speeds up provisioning time and reduces storage costs.
  • vApp Custom Properties: Allows developers and other users to easily pass user data into guest OSes using OVF descriptors.
  • Blocking Tasks and Notifications: Programmatically connect vCloud Director to enterprise systems (e.g. CMDB) enabling end-to-end system automation.
  • Expanded vCloud API: Additional commands added to the vCloud API namespace to include all GUI-accessible actions and enable broader integration and scripting using the API.
  • Microsoft SQL Server Support: For new deployments of vCloud Director, Microsoft SQL is supported for the vCloud database in addition to the previously supported database servers.
  • vShield Edge VPN integration: Programmatically create site-to-site IPSec-VPN tunnels to connect across clouds.

 

 

Release: VMware Converter 5.0

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I know that not many of the Enterprises still have a need for converting their physical machines in-place to virtuals, but the SMB customers still do.  Converter 5.0 was released yesterday (sorry, I was on a plane back from VMWorld most of the day.)  You can get right to the download here.

Here’s the What’s New Section from the release notes:

The VMware vCenter Converter Standalone 5.0 includes the following new functionality:

  • Preserving the LVM configuration on the source machine during Linux conversions.
  • Enhanced synchronization including options for scheduling synchronization tasks and performing multiple synchronization tasks in a conversion job.
  • Optimized disk and partition alignment and cluster size change.
  • Conversion data is encrypted between the source and the server.
  • Restoring VCB images.

 

VMWorld 2011 Keynote Day 2

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The “regulars” at VMWorld know that this is the keynote to attend.  The second day is where we hear less about The Vision and more about The Technology.  Looks like a much fuller house this morning.  The Keynote begins at 8:07 am pacific time.

Here we go:

The keynote kicks off with a video with admins and some of the issues they have and how they are solving them.

First speaker is Dr. Steve Herrod, CTO, VMware.  Steve talks about the world we come from, the world of managing desktops and servers.  He says that we want to start managing services and not servers.  We want to manage devices, not users.  Steve shows another video about how people are using mobile devices for their day-today work.  Steve is segueing into how we keep up to managing these devices and the user’s information and data.  Steve says we need to simplify, manage and connect the users.  He says VMware has been using View to provide the desktop as a service and using ThinApp to create an App Catalog Service.  Lastly, VMware has been creating a new data service which manages the user’s information.

Steve now starts to show a demo of View 5 and how it provisions desktops.  This is a demonstration of the “desktop as a service” above.  The next thing is to provide the apps as a catalog.  Steve then does a demo of Horizon.  The cool part here is he’s showing how Horizon will be able to scan for apps and import them into the catalog.  (This is huge as I believe the main challenge to ThinApp adoption is the admin work required to package the apps. – This drastically reduces that time.)  He shows how Horizon will be able to deploy apps automatically when the user uses it the first time or can be chosen by the user from a catalog.

Steve goes on to talk about the user data to manage.  He talks about “Project Octopus” and compares it to Dropbox.  He shows how the data will be managed: A user can use a spreadsheet on their desktop and then it sill automatically be available on their phone.  All of the demos are from the Administrator perspective and how the admins will control these products.

Steve moves on to demo the same products from the user perspective.  Steve introduces Vittorio to demo View5 and Horizon and he pretends to have it first day on the job.  He shows how he logs into his desktop for the first time and chooses his office applications from a dashboard.  He also shows how he can choose mobile apps from the same dashboard.  As he chooses one for his mobile, he gets a text message from the server with a link to install the app. (Pretty cool stuff).  Steve is back and summarizes the demo.  He talks about how they are working on implanting this on Android mobile devices.  He says that they have started strategic partnerships with Samsung to roll it out on their devices.  (No mention of Apple whatsoever.)

Vittorio is back again to demo how he gets his data on the road.  He does a demo where he has Excel on his iPad to edit a spreadsheet on the road. Steve is back recapping the demo.  Steve explains AppBlast (just demoed for the first time publicly) which gives users the ability to run Windows Apps on the iPad with nothing but HTML5.  (Very, very cool stuff – get ready Citrix, you’ll need something comparable).

Steve is now switching from desktops.  He shows the new vSphere Client for iPad and how a vMotion is done by “dragging” the VM from one host to another on the iPad.  Steve goes on to the new features in vSphere 5.  Steve gives an overview of VMware Go.  It’s a hosted service that helps SMBs deploy VMware in their environment.  He also talks about the new vSphere Storage Appliance and welcomes Bruce to the stage to show both.  Bruce shows a demo of VMware Go and the vSphere Storage Appliance.  Steve now talking about Auto Deploy and how it can spin up hosts running ESXi very quickly.  He talks about the large VMs of vSphere 5 (32-vCPUs, 1TB RAM, etc)

He talks a little more about Intelligent Virtual Infrastructure and when we deploy VMs, we should be able to “set it and forget it.”  When we deploy VMs we should be able to set policies for VMs so that they cannot “misbehave” in the future.  He’s now reviewing the new storage IO controls, pools and storage DRS in vSphere 5.  He moves into networking.  He’s describing the problem we have with networking today.  This issue is that identifier = location.  He describes their solution: VXLAN.  VXLAN is a way to move VMs across datacenters and maintain connectivity while moving VMs.  VMware has summited this as a standard with the help of Cisco.  Steve says this is the last barrier for full Cloud mobility.  After we solve this, customers will be able to unleash the full power of the global cloud.

Steve goes on to DR and Site Recovery Manager 5.  He talks about the new vSphere Replication built in to replicate the VMs to the DR side without the need for storage based replication (love this stuff.)  He mentions that when they integrate VXLAN, you will not need to reconfigure the IP addresses in the VMs.

Now on to security.  Steve describes vShield Endpoint, Edge and App and how the new features in 5.0 protect the VMs at many layers. He then goes on to management and how the focus of VMware is to automate as much as possible.  He gives the audience a “sneak peek” at where the automation tools are going.  He shows the new vSphere Web Client and shows a new column in the client labeled “Services.”  This enables the admin to see what is running on them without an agent.  The client is also showing the integration between VMs.  The use case is that if I protect a app server by SRM, the client can warn me that the app server depends on the sql server and it is not protected (absolutely brilliant.)  Steve goes on to show an upcoming version of vSphere Operations.  It has a new display of “Business Metrics” these are rollups for Management to be able to see how the infrastructure is performing.

Steve starts to sum up the keynote and how it’s about services and people.  How we have to adapt and use these technologies in the future.

My notes:  A few nice peeks at advances: AppBlast, VXLAN, vSphere and Operations futures sprinkled in with all of the new stuff in vSphere 5.  One thing I absolutely noticed: minimal vFabric mentions.  Reason being that this is not a developer conference and I’ve seen vFabric clear a room of non-developers.  Well done VMware.

 

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