VMware’s Experiemental Features

2 Dec
2008

One of the first things you notice in VMware releases are the experiemental features.  They’re usually cool and cutting edge, but just what does experiemental mean?  Well, a couple weeks back, I attended a customer focused seminar at HP in Colorado Springs.  One of the folks responsible for cultivating the relationship with HP from VMware spoke and explained a little more about this experimental tag.

Experimental to VMware means basically that they have done all the research and development for the feature in the product and the features is fully functional.  What has not been completed is complete quality and assurances testing on the feature and how it interacts with other functionality or hardware.  

This is one of the cool things about VMware and I agree with another speaker who pointed out that it shows VMware is a tech centered company.  By introducing these features into the golden master release, they get thousands of hands on the functionality, lots of feedback and it is just experimentally supported – so they don’t recommend it for production environments.   But, its a good compromise from a commercial entity with an open-source (release early, release often) mentality.


1 Response to VMware’s Experiemental Features

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Tech Talk » Blog Archive » VMware View 3 (formerly VDI) released

December 2nd, 2008 at 9:14 am

[...] The most exciting, at least from my perspective, is the offline desktop.  View has a check-out feature, much like the local library.  From the VMware presentation a couple weeks ago in Colorado Springs, this feature will allow you to boot your laptop into a thin hypervisor (a la ESX) on the client,  login into the View Manager and check-out your virtual desktop, download the files onto your laptop, run it locally.   For the mobile workforce, this is a great capability.  The way that I’ve seen this run, at least so far, is via a bootable USB thumb drive.  The thumb drive boots you into the hypervisor and interface for VDI.  Once the virtual desktop has downloaded, you then execute it on the laptop or other local device (some vendors, such as Wyse are introducing thin laptop products).   After you’ve finished using the virtual desktop offline, you can reintroduce it to the backend infrastructure which merges the changes back into your online copy of the virtual desktop.  This feature carries an Experiemental tag (see this post for explaination).  [...]

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