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Fusion 1.1 Bug Update

Posted by murreyaw Dec 6, 2007

Ok, so the Time Machine problem appears to be fixed with 10.5.1. Thanks to the folks at Apple. So now in about 20 minutes, I have fully restartable instances of my XP VM for the last month! WOOT!

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Fusion 1.1

Posted by murreyaw Nov 15, 2007

Okay,

I have been running Fusion 1.1 for about a week now. So far its been pretty stable, but I have noticed a couple of bugs.

1.) The UI for Fusion itself seams to die occasionally. When working in Full Screen mode, I noticed that the Ctrl - Open Apple, didn't take me out of full screen. I sent my mouse to the top of the screen, and the menu didn't appear. Other than that, everything else in the VM was functioning. I was able to get back to my Mac Desktop via spaces. I went ahead and Forced Quit of VMWare Fusion. I then restarted it. The VM came right back up and was running like nothing happened. Very wierd, but probably something minor.

2.) Its integration with Time Machine could use some work. Maybe this is more of a Leopard problem, than a VMWare problem. I have a FW 400 drive connected, and during a Time Machine backup, the box gets very sputtery. If I exclude the vmdk it works fine. I would like to get snapshots of the VM files, but today it looks like I am stuck copying my files to the local MAC folder structure.

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Fusion - First Thoughts

Posted by murreyaw Oct 23, 2007

Ok, I bought my first Mac ever last week. I picked up a MacBook Pro 15" with all the trimmings. When I was in the apple store, I played around with their virtualization product and wasn't very impressed. When I ordered my Mac, I went ahead and threw in an order for Fusion. For $60 or whatever it cost me, I didn't think I could go wrong. My Mac came, I installed Fusion and am thoroughly impressed. What a great application. Its everything that VMWare Workstation is, plus more. Running XP on my Mac is working out great. I don't have to worry about buying any MS Office for Mac products. I can work in Outlook, and not have to mess with using Exchange with Apple Mail or Microsoft Entourage. It all in all rocks. The only issue that I have is with the Unity feature set. It isn't quite there, but I am sure that by version 2.0 they will make running Windows apps as seamless as firing off Mac apps.

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Virtualization – It is more than just server consolidation

Remember those old commercials where people came into work on Monday morning and thought that all of the servers had been stolen? That is the same path that most of us took when we first starting implementing virtualization. We were looking for a way to take the applications that were running on legacy servers and move them painlessly to another platform. We needed to find a away to take all of those applications that didn’t play well together and run them on the same box. We needed to eliminate all of those extra hardware costs. Virtualization was a great fit for that particular need.

Now that virtualization software has matured, it offers us features and abilities that we hadn’t even dreamed of. Virtualization can be used to provide for high availability, on demand resource additions, disaster recovery, and even rapid application development and deployment. There are also virtualization products that allow you to deploy a standard image across every desktop machine in the enterprise virtually eliminating the pains of upgrades and desktop replacement.

Lets walk through a scenario. You are an ecommerce director. You are running a successful online widget business. As the holidays approach you are expecting your business to do some major advertising that will create several flash traffic spikes. There is nothing worse than a web based storefront that is slow and unresponsive. You are in a very comma dilemma. Do you build out your infrastructure to handle these peak moments, or your normal traffic load at a quarter of the cost. With virtualization technologies you have the ability to dynamically add resources to your environment at a fraction of the cost of purchasing all of the hardware you normally would in order to accommodate this flash load. Through just a click of a mouse, you can spin up multiple virtual web and application servers.

What about disaster recovery? Virtualization software now has the ability to do intelligent VM HA, and Dynamic Resource Allocation. What does this mean? Lets say you have three physical servers running virtualization software. This software has the ability to be clustered together, to create a “pool” of resources if you will. If you’re mission critical software application is running in a VM on a host in the cluster, and that host happens to suffer a hardware failure, the virtualized cluster is intelligent enough to restart that mission critical application VM on another box in seconds. What used to require a phone call or a trip up to the datacenter is now handled by the software itself in seconds rather than hours. You don’t have to reinstall the operating system. You don’t have to reinstall the application. You don’t have to restore the data from tape.

All in all, virtualization has come a long way from its humble beginnings. Many of the concerns that we had over single points of failure taking down multiple machines has been erased. If you are remotely interested in virtualization, check out the following URLs.

http://www.vmware.com/
http://www.microsoft.com/virtualserver

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