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    Parallels looks to shake up virtual server market

Virtualisation company reveals strategy to enter crowded server hypervisor market, with more flexible approach and lower cost structure.

By Benny Har-Even, 30 Apr 2008 at 16:24

Parallels , the virtualisation company best known for its software of the same name than enables users to run Windows on Apple Mac computers, is seeking to expand the market with a new approach to server virtualisation.

This is ahead of the full release of Parallels Server later this year, which is currently in the third round of it Beta stage.

In a briefing with IT PRO, Corey Thomas, vice president of the business and consumer divisions at Parallels, said that the company wasn't aiming to directly take on the big players in the virtualisation server market, such as VMware and Microsoft. Instead it is looking to just go round them by expanding the market with fresh users that previously wouldn't have had the time or resources to consider the potential benefits of virtualisation, such as increased efficiency through hardware consolidation and reduced energy costs.

"Many companies would benefit from virtualisation, but find that there are many barriers such as ease-of-use and complexity." said Thomas. The key advantage that the company is pushing with Parallels Server, is that while it is a bare metal hypervisor, it will also be able to be installed in on an existing server, without having to wipe and replace any existing data, dramatically reducing deployment timescales.

Inevitably, this approach will incur performance penalties over the traditional approach but Thomas was quick to play this down stating that IT admins were more than willing to sacrifice a small amount of performance for the added convenience and speed of deployment. "We're not tech purists", he said, "we're just interested in solving problems".

Thomas also attacked the bigger players for offering, "complex and confusing licensing practices," and said that Parallels Server would offer a far simpler pricing structure at a cost that would be a fraction of existing competitor offerings.

Part of this will be down to the built-in management tools, crucial for effective dealing with virtual server sprawl. While the major players offer these as additional cost add-ons, Parallels will have them built-in. "We're looking to give users everything they need in the box, said Thomas. "If virtualisation gets broadly adopted, we win, so we want to try to address the needs of the overworked system admin" he added.

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