01/15/2008, 5:00pm, EST
Tuesday, January 15th
VMware demos Leopard Server under VM
While the company will not disclose any products or release dates attached to the new technology, it says that it realizes how important virtualized servers are, and hopes to exploit them in future software. It admits though that the demonstration is running on a Mac, when many users are most eager to run Leopard Server on non-Apple systems.

Filed under: software, networking
Other story tags: MWSF 08, virtualization, vmware, Leopard Server
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Of course, though, the biggest issue is the license. Apple's license says you HAVE to run the OS on an Apple-branded computer. The huge benefit of virtualizing your servers is to buy a bunch of big ol' server machines and run a good number of different OS'es on them.
What Apple wants people to do, of course, is buy their XServes so you can run OS X on that. They don't want you just buying the OS and running it in a VMWare window on that 16-core Dell server in your closet (and people call Apple a software company).
Virtualized server environments are the way of the future. Ever seen one of the IBM "go green" commercials for the IBM System z9 BC mainframe? Those are virtualized server environments, gives you an approximate 10 servers to 1 beefed up controller (some even better ratios with better hardware). This cuts energy costs, cooling costs, space requirements, & makes management easier & more efficient.