A Django site.
October 10, 2008
» Open source development and OpenOffice.org

Gnomer (and Novell employee), Michael Meeks, provides some great insight into the health and viability of the Open Office project. A complex wonder of engineering (supporting .doc in some cases better than Word) while also supporting open standards,

February 10, 2008

Stephen Shaw
no nic
Decriptor's Blog
» ZDnet’s poor article on Citrix and XEN?

ZDnet  had an article on Citrix and their position/dedication to XEN.  For those that weren’t aware, Citrix bought XEN for $500 million last year.  I had one thought about this article until I read one of the comments.  So if you read it, beware maybe don’t jump to conclusions at first.  Here is the comment from Citrix’s CTO VMD Simon Crosby:

I hope this is ok.  If not please let me know and I apologize ahead of time.

Citrix is committed to Xen

It appears that somehow when we briefed Paula, we managed to confuse her. I accept full responsibility for this, but think it is important to state the facts:

1. The Xen project is in great shape, superbly funded by Citrix and the community, and is operated independently from Citrix, by the Xen project Advisory Board. Citrix has more than doubled XenSource’s open source team size already, and is continuing to develop new initiatives for Xen. At the most recent Xen developer summit in December, we had over 200 attendees, and there was fantastic participation from across the industry. Our own open source team operates independently from the product groups and has a blank check for headcount and resource. As I said previously, I’d be happy to fill you in on this.

2. XenServer is a core foundational product to Citrix. Specifically, XenApp (formerly Presentation Server) and XenDesktop (formerly Desktop Server, addressing the VDI use case) will both include XenServer in all future releases. Why? Because XenServer has been optimized to run the XenApp and XenDesktop workloads, and provides a fantastic set of manageability, availability, scalability, and flexibility options to the XenApp/XenDesktop administrator, with incredible performance (very significantly better than VMware’s, for those same workloads). Today our customers tell us that they hate to use VMware for virtualizing Presentation Server, because of the performance issues, but they need to do so for various reasons: test & dev flexibility, consistency of image management, DR, ease of provisioning etc. XenServer offers them all they need, at much better price/performance than VMware.

3. XenServer itself continues to go from strength to strength. The new release 4.1 boasts over 50 new features and performance optimizations, and a profound and strategic tight coupling between the virtual infrastructure platform and smart virtualization aware storage, such as the NetApp devices. Expect a range of exciting announcements as we move down this path.

In a nutshell: Xen is profoundly important to Citrix, is changing everything about the way that Citrix develops and delivers its products. Citrix is fully supportive of open source and the community, and you will see much more than just Xen as a core community focus from Citrix in the not too distant future.

Simon Crosby, CTO VMD, Citrix.

December 5, 2007

Kevin Kubasik
nonic
For Once I Oneder
» Major PhotoBlog Catchup!

Ok, so some of you may have noticed I’ve been a little quiet lately, over this time of non-blogging I built up a dozen great ideas for entries, and collected the photos to flesh them out. However, I am far to lazy, so you all get this little summary post instead. Let me apologize upfront, these were all taken with a cruddy phone. I’ll have another post with my technical musings later this week.

  1. Who knew Utah was so cool! After attending the Ubuntu-Utah group meeting, I was floored at how active the area was! Not only was the user group active, social and plenty fun, but I quickly learned about the Utah Open Source Foundation, which is (for lack of something more elegant) just plain awesome, the guys that run it could not be doing a better job. It was at a Multi-Distro Release Party (graciously hosted by Novell at their Open Source Technologies Center) that I caught this amusing moment, after Ubuntu is Linux for Human Beings, there aren’t age limits ;)

    BabyBuntu

  2. Some (hopefully legal) shots of the Novell Provo campus, its quite nice:

    Novell Provo 2

    Novell Provo 1

  3. Another fun tidbit about Salt Lake City, they have not only the best burrito joint on earth, but random neon orange flags at street crossings…

OrangeFlags

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