kennyo wrote: Actually, Egenera's CEO is staying on as Board chairman. As the company transitions to be a multi-platform player, the feeling is to have management who are experts about software, the converged infrastructure market, and familiar with the players in the space. Ergo the new CEO, and ergo the new levels of backing from investors. The company is still hiring in its field and OEM spaces, and in conversations with multiple IHV partners.
Egenera has gone to market with its promised vBlade
software, the extension to its PAN Manager that provides a single
environment for configuring, allocating, repurposing and managing
both physical servers and virtual machines.
This initial implementation uses
XenEnterprise, a virtualization solution from XenSource based on
the open source Xen hypervisor. Egenera intends to put other
hypervisors in PAN for future vBlade implementations.
VBlades, which are priced as an
add-on, are user-defined partitions of a physical blade to
consolidate multiple VMs on a single physical server. Pan can
figure out whether an application needs a whole blade or just part
of one. It saves the user from having to add another domain expert
to the IT organization.
VMs on Egenera's BladeFrame systems
can access N+1 failover, N+1 disaster recovery, resource pools,
blade farms, suspend/resume, live migrations and security.
Egenera says virtual machines add
management complexity especially when a lot of them are used. They
need tools that are sophisticated and understand dependencies.
About Virtualization News SYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.
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#1
Virtualization News Desk commented on 5 May 2007
VBlades, which are priced as an add-on, are user-defined partitions of a physical blade to consolidate multiple VMs on a single physical server. Pan can figure out whether an application needs a whole blade or just part of one. It saves the user from having to add another domain expert to the IT organization. VMs on Egenera's BladeFrame systems can access N+1 failover, N+1 disaster recovery, resource pools, blade farms, suspend/resume, live migrations and security.
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