Steve Herrod started off the keynote today discussing VDI,
including the announcement of an agreement to embed RTO Software’s Virtual Profiles
into View. Their goal is to provide end
users the same rich experience no matter the situation (WAN, LAN or offline
mobile). Like any good Herrod keynote,
live demos ensued, including PCOIP and the Wyse iPhone View Client. The demo of the Mobile Virtualization Phone
was pretty interesting, especially when he showed that the demo app was running
in an android VM, completely seamless within the Windows CE environment. The keynote then switched over to the
datacenter, where he came out swinging by describing why VMotion is more mature
and proven (and a time-tested marriage saver) compared to other “live
migration” offerings. Next, he discussed
the fact that VMware is currently working towards I/O based DRS, which will
include setting shares and IOPs limits per hard disk. He then covered the big features of vSphere,
but didn’t cover anything new until the end when he introduced and gave a quick
demo of vCenter ConfigControl. Next up
was the cloud discussion, but nothing terribly groundbreaking, though he did
mention long-distance VMotion as an upcoming feature. Following up on the cloud discussion, Mr.
Herrod described IaaS, PaaS and Saas (Infrastructure, Platform and Software as
a Service, respectively), and why SpringSource is so key to the cloud strategy. In essence, it helps to continue to break
apart the different layers of the datacenter into individual pieces that can be
manipulated independently from one another.
The CEO of SpringSource then came out to demo their technology. All in all, another great keynote. Steve Herrod is not to be missed!
After the keynote I attended a session on vSphere deployments
in the morning and an AppSpeed presentation in the afternoon. Both were okay, but informational. AppSpeed is definitely worth considering, but
still has a lot of maturing to do.
Most of my day was spent in the Solutions Expo chatting with
many different vendors. The most impressive
product I saw was the new HP MDS600,
which is a SAS direct storage solution.
It holds 70 SAS drives in 5U.
Very impressive when you consider some of the futures of the SAS
switches in the c-class blade system. Go
check it out; I believe they have one set up in the Melanox booth. I also spent some time with VDI related
vendors, including the aforementioned RTO Software, AppSense and LiquidWare
Labs. All have very interesting products
that will need some lab time.
The highlight of the day was the vExpert lunch and
meeting. It was a great opportunity to
meet and chat with many familiar names.
I can’t possibly list them here, but it was great meeting every one of
you. We even got to hear from Steve
Herrod who told us he was going to be the executive sponsor of the program
going forward.
And then the party…
As always, the party was a great time. The food wasn’t great, but the drinks were
free and the band was great, as was the company. Unfortunately, by the time the concert was
done, we emerged to find that the entire party was shut down, which was very
disappointing! We didn’t have near
enough time to enjoy anything else that VMware had arranged for us.