McAfee's MOVE tackles 'all types' of virtual environment attacks
McAfee's new agentless solution aims to protect virtual environments from all types of attacks with help from VMware.
McAfee's new agentless solution aims to protect virtual environments from all types of attacks with help from VMware.
Storage is front and center at VMworld this week. And well it should: storage has always been the virtual machine's (VM) Achilles heel. Can it be fixed?
The virtualization powerhouse said the changes illustrate the growth and evolution of its hybrid cloud services.
VMware’s Horizon Mobile technology is finally set to launch, starting with Telefónica as announced at Mobile World Congress 2012 in Barcelona this week.See also: CNET’s Mobile World Congress 2012 coverageThe new service is touted as a "phone-in-a-phone," meaning both work and personal mobile environments separately on the same device.
Well, I can’t say that I am terribly surprised to see that this company is moving with such quick paces. It is the way the big players in the technology industry have to work.
An update to the widely used open-source Xen hypervisor has been released, providing improvements to performance, scalability, memory usage and security, according to Xen.org.
Notching up its efforts in the world's second largest market, VMware is pumping millions into a new R&D center to boost operations in the region.
When you make a promise and you deliver on it, on or ahead of schedule and under budget people begin to believe, they're willing to participate and actively suggest other possible uses with technology that maybe you didn't think of. So you end up with a great technology-business relationship.
I used to think of VMware (a part of EMC) as a savvy technology company that figured out something others couldn't. Now the company has also become business and politically savvy in trying to establish VMware as a de facto standard (the default) for virtualization services by allowing partners to access its ESX Server source code and interfaces.
In my quest for the perfect notebook that could double as both my production system to get my job done as well as a test system for a year's worth (or more) of testing Microsoft Windows "Vista64" (see our new blog: Microsoft vistulations), I've been playing around with the idea of using virtual machine (VM) technology like VMware Workstation 5 to minimize the headaches of having to re-provision my production setup (in the event that the test setup destroys it).