Wednesday 29 July 2015

VMware and Microsoft are the top virtualization leaders, according to Gartner

VMware and Microsoft are the top virtualization leaders, according to Gartner

Gartner's Magic Quadrant for x86 server virtualization puts VMware and Microsoft as leaders. Find out what the report's findings indicate for the future of the data center.

Gartner has released its Magic Quadrant report on x86 server virtualization infrastructure for 2015. VMware and Microsoft retained their spots in the top right quadrant, which Gartner reserves for the leaders. Vendors that made it into the niche players quadrant are Citrix, Huawei, Odin, Oracle, and Red Hat.

gartnermagicquadrantjuly2015virtualization.png
Magic Quadrant for x86 server virtualization infrastructure
 Image: Gartner (July 2015)

VMware leads the pack but faces challenges

VMware is still the undisputed leader in the x86 virtualization segment, but it is clear the company is under pressure due to the increased adoption of cloud infrastructure services, market saturation, and competitive pressure from Microsoft. Gartner states that it is witnessing increased client inquiries about comparing vSphere and Hyper-V.

While some large enterprises are moving away from VMware to Microsoft, a few are switching from Hyper-V to vSphere. The company is also facing a competitive threat from Oracle, as customers prefer to run mission-critical database workloads on a homogenous, certified virtualization platform. The rise in the adoption of OpenStack-based private clouds and containers are impacting vSphere's adoption in the enterprise. Red Hat is moving towards becoming a preferred platform for running virtualized Linux workloads.

Gartner also highlighted the trend of cloud-native workloads moving to Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) platforms such as Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, which is an area of concern for VMware. vCloud Air, VMware's hybrid cloud platform, has yet to make a dent in the market.

Microsoft is augmenting Hyper-V with Azure capabilities

The report comes at a time when Microsoft is readying the next version of Windows Server, which includes a newer version of Hyper-V. Compared to last year, Microsoft's Hyper-V has moved up by a few notches in the top right quadrant, which indicates that the company is making progress with its virtualization strategy. Hyper-V's tight integration with the OS and management tools makes it easy for customers to deploy and manage large workloads. Since the hypervisor is bundled with Windows Server, the cost is almost zero.

Gartner said, "Microsoft's efforts in enabling Azure-like capability have been attracting enterprises interested in leveraging Azure and managing both on-premises Hyper-V and Azure services. There is a growing interest in using Hyper-V for Microsoft-based development teams, especially due to its Azure affinity."

Microsoft's game plan of building a private cloud platform that's highly compatible with the Azure public cloud is paying off; the recently announced Azure Stack is a step in that direction. With the battleground slowly shifting from plain vanilla virtualization to the private cloud, Microsoft is solidifying its hybrid cloud strategy by reducing the gap between its public and private cloud platforms.

Once branded as a Windows-only hypervisor, Microsoft has invested in making Hyper-V compatible with Linux; this is helping the company acquire new customers with heterogeneous environments. "Hyper-V will likely be more successful in development teams interested in Azure, but requiring on-premises deployments. As Microsoft further improves its support for Azure affinity, and adds support for Windows containers in a future release, its success with development teams will continue to grow," says Gartner.

Microsoft has some work to do with its tools when compared to VMware; Gartner found that its tools are not easy to use. Similar to VMware, open source technologies are eating into Microsoft's virtualization revenue.

RHEV as the foundation for Red Hat's cloud

Red Hat is eyeing the third slot in the Magic Quadrant, after VMware and Microsoft. According to Gartner, Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV), a KVM-based hypervisor, has a 5% adoption rate in the market. Its integrated stack of RHEV, CloudForms, OpenStack, and OpenShift will help penetrate the enterprise market.

Citrix feels the heat from vSphere and Hyper-V

When compared to its position in the 2014 Magic Quadrant, Citrix hasn't made much progress with its XenServer, XenDesktop, and XenApp portfolio. Given the adoption of Xen hypervisor in the public cloud service provider market, including Amazon Web Services, Citrix is focusing on winning this category. Though XenDesktop and XenApp are enjoying wide usage in the desktop virtualization segment, the backend hypervisor is either vSphere or Hyper-V.

The company is also pushing its CloudStack based CloudPlatform into the enterprise market. The competition from OpenStack and commercial cloud platforms based on vSphere and Hyper-V makes it an uphill battle for Citrix.

Oracle, Huawei, and Odin are finding their niches

Oracle VM, which is based on the open source hypervisor Xen, is preferred by customers who consider Oracle certification, license, and support. Gartner says that the third-party ecosystem for Oracle virtualization is smaller than that of the market leaders, which impacts its adoption.

FusionSphere, Huawei's virtualization platform, is making inroads in emerging markets such as Brazil, Russia, India, and China.

In March 2015, Parallels, Inc., a cross-platform hosting automation company, spun off its service provider business into Odin. Given its broad expertise of containers, the company hopes to acquire new service provider customers.

What this means to enterprise IT

With Gartner stating that 75% of x86 workloads are already virtualized, most of the organizations are considering the next logical step: deploying a hybrid cloud. VMware vCloud Air and Microsoft Azure Stack are viable options for customers to implement the hybrid strategy.

Enterprise IT is also evaluating the rapidly evolving container technologies. With the recent announcements of the Open Container Initiative and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation, there is an emphasis on migrating a certain class of applications to containers. Traditional virtualization vendors including Microsoft, VMware, and Red Hat are heavily investing in containerized technologies. Indicators of this trend are: Microsoft's investment in Hyper-V containers andNano Server; VMware's decision to build Photon, a specialized OS for containers; and Red Hat's launch of Atomic Host.

Customers should carefully analyze their portfolio of applications to identify workloads that are best suited for traditional virtualization, containerization, and cloud. The future of the data center is the hybrid cloud followed by containers.

VMware and Microsoft are the top virtualization leaders In 2015

PC shipments drop in June quarter: Gartner

PC shipments drop in June quarter: Gartner

PTI | Jul 10, 2015, 05.30PM IST

 

MUMBAI: Global PC shipments witnessed a 9.5 % decline in the second quarter of 2015 totalling to 68.4 million units, according to research firm Gartner.

This was the steepest PC shipment dip since the third quarter of 2013, Gartner said while adding that PC shipments are projected to decline 4.4% in 2015.

"The price hike of PCs became more apparent in some regions due to a sharp appreciation of the US dollar against local currencies. The price hike could hinder PC demand in these regions," Gartner principal analyst Mikako Kitagawa said in a statement.

"Secondly, the worldwide PC market experienced unusually positive desk-based growth last year due to the end of Windows XP support. After the XP impact was phased out, there have not been any major growth drivers to stimulate a PC refresh," he said

Kitagawa further said the Windows 10 launch scheduled for third quarter of 2015 has created self-regulated inventory control, as PC vendors and the channels tried clearing inventory as much as possible before the Windows 10 launch.

Lenovo led the market with 19.7% market share, followed by followed by HP with 17.4% and Dell with 14%

PC shipment in Asia/Pacific region reached 24.2 million units in the second quarter of 2015, a 2.9% decline from the same period last year.

Both desk-based and mobile PC shipments dwindled from the second quarter of 2014. PC shipments in China are estimated to have dipped 4% in the quarter as demand for consumer PCs remained weak, it said.

Wednesday 1 July 2015

VMware Vsphere 5.x - Books


  • Disaster Recovery Using VMware vSphere Replication and vCenter Site Recovery Manager = Abhilash GB = Packt Publishing.pdf 4 MB
  • Implementing VMware vCenter Server = Konstantin Kuminsky = Packt Publishing.pdf 11 MB
  • Learning Veeam Backup & Replication for VMware vSphere = Christian Mohn = Packt Publishing.pdf 6 MB
  • Managing and Optimizing VMware vSphere Deployments = Sean Crookston,Harley Stagner = VMware Press.pdf 5 MB
  • Mastering VMware vSphere 5.5 = Nick Marshall, Scott Lowe, Forbes Guthrie, Matt Liebowitz, Josh Atwell = Sybex, an Imprint of Wiley.pdf 44 MB
  • Networking for VMware Administrators = Chris Wahl, Steve Panto = VMware Press.pdf 18 MB
  • The Official VCP5 Certification Guide = Bill Ferguson = VMware Press.pdf 92 MB
  • Torrent downloaded from demonoid.ph.txt 0 MB
  • Troubleshooting vSphere Storage = Mike Preston = Packt Publishing.pdf 2 MB
  • VCAP5-DCD Official Cert Guide = Paul McSharry = VMware Press.pdf 2 MB
  • VCP-Cloud Official Cert Guide = Tom Ralph, Nathan Raper = VMware Press.pdf 31 MB
  • VCP5 VMware Certified Professional on vSphere 5 Study Guide = Brian Atkinson = Sybex, an Imprint of Wiley.pdf 18 MB
  • VMware Cookbook 2nd Edition = Ryan Troy and Matthew Helmke = O'Reilly.pdf 13 MB
  • VMware Private Cloud Computing with vCloud Director = Simon Gallagher,Aidan Dalgleish = Packt Publishing.epub 29 MB
  • VMware Private Cloud Computing with vCloud Director = Simon Gallagher,Aidan Dalgleish = Packt Publishing.pdf 55 MB
  • VMware vCenter Operations Manager Essentials = Lauren Malhoit = Packt Publishing.epub 24 MB
  • VMware vCenter Operations Manager Essentials = Lauren Malhoit = Packt Publishing.mobi 34 MB
  • VMware vCenter Operations Manager Essentials = Lauren Malhoit = Packt Publishing.pdf 11 MB
  • VMware vCloud Director Cookbook = Daniel Langenhan = Packt Publishing.epub 22 MB
  • VMware vCloud Director Cookbook = Daniel Langenhan = Packt Publishing.pdf 6 MB
  • VMware vCloud Security = Prasenjit Sarkar = Packt Publishing.epub 11 MB
  • VMware vCloud Security = Prasenjit Sarkar = Packt Publishing.pdf 4 MB
  • VMware vSphere 5 Administration Instant Reference = Christopher Kusek,Van V. Van Noy,Andy Daniel = Sybex, an Imprint of Wiley.pdf 9 MB
  • VMware vSphere 5.1 Clustering Deepdive = Duncan Eppin,Frank Denneman.pdf 15 MB
  • VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook = Abhilash GB = Packt Publishing.epub 38 MB
  • VMware vSphere 5.1 Cookbook = Abhilash GB = Packt Publishing.pdf 11 MB
  • VMware vSphere Design 2nd Edition = Forbes Guthrie, Scott Lowe = Sybex, an Imprint of Wiley.pdf 16 MB
  • VMware vSphere Performance Designing CPU, Memory, Storage, and Networking for Performance-Intensive Workloads = Matt Liebowitz,Christopher Kusek,Rynardt Spies = Sybex, an Imprint of Wiley.pdf 6 MB
  • VMware vSphere Resource Management Essentials = Jonathan Frappier = Packt Publishing.pdf 2 MB
  • Virtualizing SQL Server with VMware Doing IT Right = Michael Corey,Jeff Szastak,Michael Webster = VMware Press.pdf 26 MB
  • vSphere Design Best Practices = Brian Bolander, Christopher Kusek = Packt Publishing.epub 3 MB
  • vSphere Design Best Practices = Brian Bolander, Christopher Kusek = Packt Publishing.mobi 3 MB
  • vSphere Design Best Practices = Brian Bolander, Christopher Kusek = Packt Publishing.pdf 2 MB
  • vSphere High Performance Cookbook = Prasenjit Sarkar = Packt Publishing.epub 12 MB
  • vSphere High Performance Cookbook = Prasenjit Sarkar = Packt Publishing.mobi 18 MB
  • vSphere High Performance Cookbook = Prasenjit Sarkar = Packt Publishing.pdf 6 MB