Comments on: Microsoft 'hypervisor' plan takes shape
Hypervisor software is all the rage, and Microsoft plans to enter the market with its own product in 2007.
Hypervisor software is all the rage, and Microsoft plans to enter the market with its own product in 2007.
January 2, 2010 6:26 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:56 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:16 PM PST
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2. Xen will support Windows when the new hypervisor hardware will be available. It's in the Xen FAQ.
3. Xen runs on currently x86 hardware. For the Microsoft product, you have to wait a year and then buy new hardware and software.
4. Xen lets you choose the operating system you want to run the thin, master hypervisor (which Xen calls domain 0). So if you want to choose operating system X because it has a great, traffic-shaping firewall, you can.
5. Xen lets you migrate a running system to different a physical computer in real time!
6. A new major version of Xen (3.0) is due out next month.
Not to discount what HP and Sun have done, but IBM simply has broader and deeper experience. Their participation in Xen is critical to making it the best.
- Mac on a PC???
- by Earl Benser June 12, 2005 4:22 PM PDT
- Not fully functional on any current PC designs. Some hacker may
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(6 Comments)come up with an OS X look-a-like that works on a PC. I've
already seen a PC runiing WIndows with a OS X type GUI. But
Reql OS X on a PC is highly unlikely.
The problem is the antiquated PC motherboard design, which is
short many features needed for an OS X installation. Back when
the MB was designed by some unknown, the now recognized
defects were not critical. The 8088 processor, the expected
peripherals and the memory options just didn't need anything
better.
Now, the PC has tried to evolve, but the legacy defects and the
lack of any sort of design control are becoming more critical
every day. Actually, it may be a small technical miracle that
Windows runs at all on the untold number of hardware
configurations in the PC world. And as MS tries to figure out how
to make Longhorn/Shorthorn/Airhorn/Whatever work, the basic
need for a new MB design might finally get publically
recognized. And, at that time, the Mac/Intel (or MacTel) MB just
might what the PC world needs.
Then, OS X on a PC might be possible.
Or maybe not. Time will tell.
In the meantime, OS X and Windows definitely will be running on
the Mac/Intel platform.