Has EMC's VMware subsidiary lost its mojo? I ask because, all around, I see signs of a company in decline. From applications to desktops to servers, VMware looks less like the innovative contender that pioneered enterprise virtualization and more like a middle-aged has-been going through the motions.
Case in point: desktop virtualization. Time was when VMware owned this category. Its Workstation product defined it, while its ACE initiative gave it street cred in the datacenter. Company marketers would often wax poetic about the advantages of VDI (virtual desktop infrastructure) and how virtual appliances were the wave of software distribution's future.
[ InfoWorld's Paul Venezia argues that VDI's future is in doubt due to a perfect storm of trends working against it. | InfoWorld Test Center reviews: Citrix XenDesktop, Microsoft Hyper-V, and VMware VI3. ]
But then came complacency. After vanquishing Microsoft from the market, VMware left Workstation to languish with mostly incremental updates. In the meantime, Microsoft made an end-run around ACE, using its acquisition of Kidaro to drive the development of what would ultimately become MED-V. And as if this wasn't enough, there was the surprise debut of Virtual Windows XP Mode, a technology that would obviate the need for third-party legacy compatibility solutions (like the ones promoted by VMware) by baking a fully functional VM right into the OS.
VMware's response has been to cling to the high ground, retreating further into the ever-shrinking "technical superiority" niche currently occupied by VMotion and other virtualization esoterica. But even on this lofty perch, VMware isn't immune from direct assault. Sun's popular open source VM platform, VirtualBox, is now challenging VMware Workstation with support for more RAM and virtual CPUs per VM, as well as support for Direct 3D acceleration. And commercial competitor Parallels, long a thorn in VMware's side on the Macintosh platform, is going after the company's high-end technical users with its Workstation Extreme product.
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Download now »Wow, this is a horrible piece by the author. Where in the world have you been? I'm a current Fortune 100 VMware customer and haven't been more pleased. vSphere is shaping up to be one of the best and innovative products around virtualization. The features alone will keep customers like me around for the next 5 years. I don't mind opinion pieces, but sheesh, do some freaking research first. No wonder I don't subscribe to this magazine...
Well this is sad, a community and an author not able to come to some sort of agreement of what is important to them. I would expect Infoworld is focused at the medium to large business user, who doesn't really care about how Workstation is doing. All businesses are being forced to save money any where they can, and VMWare is good to NOT waste developer time on their low brow products. I personally use VMWare Server in place of Workstation for a number of reasons, mostly because I use it anywhere I can't use ESXi.
Here is how VMWare is keeping people happy - saving them money. ESXi is free / ESX you license. Both run great on that 3 year old server that's sitting idle in the back room. It will allow you to P2V your old NT4/Windows 2000 servers running critical apps that you can't upgrade to newer hardware or can't spend the consultant time to move to a new server.
You want slow IT? How about not having to invest in new hardware to test out that new product. Got an initiative that is missing any buy in from above, you can get it up and running without new hardware purchases because you run a virtual backend. It doesn't care what OS you use, and won't take down the entire environment if it dies.
How's that DR/HA planning coming? Using VMWare and Doyenz, I can replicate your entire company out of your building to the cloud. Want to test a patch? Sure thing - I can do it without impacting the production environment. Building burn down? Easy - here's data we're going to download and you'll be back up and running in a few hours. Not fast enough - here's where we're going to power up your ENTIRE COMPANY IN THE CLOUD. It's Sunguard on the cheap - and it works.

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