Tod Nielsen, COO spoke first at the keynote this
morning. He started off joking about the
slowness of the Labs yesterday. He
blamed it on an unset blinking clock (anyone know how to program a VCR?). Went over like a lead balloon. He finished by introducing a typical customer
testimonial video. Paul Maritz, CEO, came
up next on stage and stated that engineers at VMware designed vSphere to “Continually
defrag the datacenter.” He had an
engineer from IBM on stage to show the reduction in power utilization their
servers have achieved. This was pretty
neat, as they showed a new view of the vSphere client that showed the used
watts for the server overhead, plus the watts consumed per VM. Sounds like an important metric for vCenter
Chargeback. He then starts to dig into
the vCenter suite of products, including a demo of Chargeback and Lab Manager. Moving into the cloud, Mr. Maritz announced a
new offering: vCloud Express, which is a fast and effective way to purchase and
deploy resources in the cloud. He also
announced the vCloud API, but didn’t spend much time on it. HP came on stage to discuss View and the
products they have coming, including a storage array (LeftHand, I believe) that
pulls out in order access disks, which results in a much denser disk array, and
an HP plugin for the vSphere client that will integrate the vSphere client directly with HP tools, including the Onboard
Administrator. Next a live demo of a
Tech Preview version of PCOIP was given by TELUS, which was very impressive,
but could have been more thorough. He
finished up with discussing the SpringSource acquisition, but again didn’t
provide a lot of details or vision.
After the keynote I hit a mediocre session that isn’t really
worth discussing, then headed into a press/bloggers briefing with Paul Maritz
regarding VMware’s vCloud initiative (more on that here). Ended up eating lunch at the VMUG tables with
a bunch of Omaha-area folks for some great conversation (over some mediocre
food…do I see a theme?). After lunch I
hit the Expo floor for about an hour before vExpert booth duty. Didn’t have any questions during my booth
time, but plenty of new and old faces came by to chat. After the Expo, I went to a VDI design
session, which was good, if you like convoluted, overly complicated mathematical
calculations for determining VDI performance (though Sean Clark and I did have
some fun on Twitter). After the session
Sean Clark, Theron Conrey and I had a good discussion regarding VMware
gatherings (i.e. VMUG and Community Extravaganza). Finished up the day’s sessions with a SRM and
View integration session (DV2181), which explained some very interesting stuff
VMware and EMC have worked out to fail over an entire View infrastructure,
including the vDesktops, with SRM and a series of scripts to tweak the ADAM
database, Composer database and vmx files.
Definitely worth looking into.
Night life for tonight was a lot of fun as well. Sat down for a drink with Tripwire before
heading to Anchor and Hope for a customer appreciation dinner with Vital’s
customers. Thank you all who attended,
it is great having you all as customers!
Ended up heading back to our room early in order to rest up for another
long VMWorld (Alcatraz for the wife) day and make sure we can survive The Party.