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Microsoft Software Linux

Microsoft to Support Linux in Virtual Server 399

zaxios writes "Techworld is reporting that Microsoft has announced support for running Linux on their virtualization software, Virtual Server 2005. From the article: '[Microsoft] can't compete against VMware without support for other operating systems.' Perhaps the significance of this is that Microsoft has acknowledged Linux as an OS people might want to use, which seems an upgrade from its previous status as a communist cancer."
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Microsoft to Support Linux in Virtual Server

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  • by Hulkster ( 722642 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:15AM (#12302182) Homepage
    The commmunism [theregister.co.uk] article is dated July/2000 and the cancer [theregister.co.uk] one is dated June/2001 ... so I guess Balmer (who is quoted in the TechWorld article [techworld.com] and here's the actual Microsfot Press Release [microsoft.com]) has changed his mind after 5 years ... I guess with regards to Linux, maybe he feels that if you can't fight 'em, then join 'em.

    Enjoyed my fun little christmas hoax [komar.org] - help me do it for real in 2005! ;-) [komar.org]

    • by sepluv ( 641107 ) <blakesley@@@gmail...com> on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:47AM (#12302463)
      Makes me think of Gandhi's stages of fighting for freedom:
      1. First they ignore you
      2. then they laugh at you
      3. then they fight you
      4. then you win
      5. My corollary: then they say they were with you all along
      I thought we were at GhandiCon 3 with Microsoft but this has shades of GhandiCon 5 (my corollary).
    • Expand your search, Bill Gates comment about communism was very recent. Ballmer has said equally awful things about open source and open source developers.

      I think it's crap that you point to a five year old quote as if nothing bad was said about linux in the mean time. That smacks to me of professional level spinning.
    • by Sheepdot ( 211478 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @10:13AM (#12302737) Journal
      It's not that he's given up fighting Linux, it's just that they are trying to make the best possible product, and what good is VirtualServer 2005 if it doesn't support *nix? Seriously, what other operating system are you going to run on x86 that isn't open source or a derivative of the "communist" OS?
      • by darkjedi521 ( 744526 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @10:52AM (#12303115)
        Why, SCO Unix, of course.
      • by Belial6 ( 794905 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @12:17PM (#12303819)
        You are going to run Windows. MS bought VirtualPC for two reasons.

        1) So that they can have a thin client server that works. Run images of full OSes on virtual machins, and a low end machine with just enough juice to run Remote Desktop can now be use quite well.

        2) To resolve any problem they will ever have with backward compatibility.
        <prediction>Your custom application doesn't work with the new WinServer 2010? No problem, an NT4.0 image with all the drivers that VPC emulates compiled in (to tie the image to the host OS) is sitting on WinServer 2010 with VirtualServer. Just mark your application as a NT4.0 application, and it will run just fine.</prediction>


        With VPC, MS no longer needs to release new versions of every application they ever made just to upgrade the OS. On my system VPC gets 80%-90% processing speed compared to the native CPU. They could do some work on memory and HD speeds, but that will come. This means that as long as Visual Studio runs at decent speeds inside of VPC, MS doesn't have to upgrade it at the same time as the OS.

        With VPC MS doesn't even have to stay on the same hardware platform. If a new (or old) CPU takes a huge leap of speed due to some breakthrough, and it becomes significantly faster than the x86/AMD64 platform, MS can move all windows software to the new platform by porting Windows, and VPC. This would immediatly make them a player in the new market.

        Buying VPC was the smartest thing I have seen MS do in years.
    • by Master of Transhuman ( 597628 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @11:49AM (#12303578) Homepage

      And Bill Gates comments about "open source communists" was last year.

      Your point then is what?

      First post?

      If Ballmer's comments have any meaning at all, it means Microsoft's virtualization project will be devoted to breaking Linux when it runs on a Microsoft host so MS can claim Linux is broken.

  • previous comments? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by AviLazar ( 741826 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:16AM (#12302186) Journal
    which seems an upgrade from its previous status as a communist cancer

    This was said five and four years ago (respectively). Sheesh - you know companies can change mindsets....Even a stone can change with time.
    • by macaulay805 ( 823467 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:19AM (#12302214) Homepage Journal
      Even a stone can change with time.

      Sir, you give me hope with that comment about my parent-in-law. Thank You.
    • by sammy baby ( 14909 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:29AM (#12302296) Journal
      "I don't see the value proposition in Linux" is the kind of mindset likely to change within five years.

      Asserting that the GPL is cancerous and free software advocates are communists is not.

      The simple truth is, Microsoft (or, at least, Bill Gates) likely never truly believed either of those things. They said them because they thought that if people believed it, it would confer a business advantage for them. For another example of this kind of behavior, I refer you towards Bill's obvious flip-floppery on the issue of software patents [com.com].
      • Gates has always hated hackers and those touting the open-source paradigm. As early as 1976, even before Microsoft was a force to contend with, he wrote a letter, the infamous Open Letter to Hobbyists [blinkenlights.com], telling them to stop their activities.

        Why? Because it was hurting software developers and by the lack of monetary compensation, it prevented good software from being written. The irony is that Bill himself said that the best way to learn how to write good software is to read source code produced by others.
      • by AviLazar ( 741826 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:36AM (#12302363) Journal
        And since we are not mind-readers, our only source of insight into Bill Gates' head is, well, Bill Gates.
        • "And since we are not mind-readers, our only source of insight into Bill Gates' head is, well, Bill Gates."

          Hey now, don't count out Dvorak!
  • oblig (Score:5, Funny)

    by MrNonchalant ( 767683 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:17AM (#12302197)
    In the post-Microsoft world I welcome our communist Linux overlords.
  • by mindaktiviti ( 630001 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:17AM (#12302198)
    Microsoft is supporting communism AND cancer!? Well I knew they were evil but this is definitely a new low. For shame, Microsoft, for shame.
  • Finally! (Score:5, Funny)

    by mathmatt ( 851301 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:17AM (#12302199) Homepage
    Does this mean I can finally run Linux under Wine?
  • Or.. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Turn-X Alphonse ( 789240 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:18AM (#12302204) Journal
    Or Microsoft wants to be able to go "hey why switch to Linux, you can do the same thing on Windows, whats up with you silly commie?"
  • by darthgnu ( 866920 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:19AM (#12302211) Homepage Journal
    make them run in a virtual server...
  • yes but.... (Score:2, Funny)

    by y2dt ( 184562 )
    ...does it run Linux?
  • Especially with Linux use as a server platform keeps growing in leaps and bounds.

    I noticed (yes I RTFA) that they are also going to license their virtual disk format royalty free.

    They have a bit of a hard road to climb it they want to compete with VMWare, but Microsoft certainly has the muscle to do so.

  • The product referred to in the article is the formerly Connectix VirtualPC, originally a Mac product for running Windows under the MacOS. Then Connectix added support for Linux, so the ability to run Linux inside a VirtualPC isn't really new, and Microsoft didn't have to write any code to do this. Of course, I don't understand what all the fuss is about when a Free and Open Source product called QEMU [bellard.free.fr] does pretty much everything VirtualPC does and it actually runs under Linux (and others), as well as suppor
    • I think you missed the point. What is new about it is that Microsoft will actually support running Linux on it's Virtual Server product. That means if an enterprise needs technical support they won't get 'sorry, but we don't support running Linux on our product, so you're on your own'.

      Having formal support means everything to most organizations.
  • by Manip ( 656104 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:21AM (#12302238)
    You need to keep in mind that Microsoft is a very large company and each department is so large that it is almost like a company within its self. So if it is bad for the Windows Server team that the Virtual Server team has done this, well too bad. The Virtual Server team needs to keep their product competitive and they are just telling it as it is; they are an x86 system virtualizer and need to support popular x86 platforms, if they didn't then they deserve to die off.

    This is no different than when Microsoft released an Office for Mac. Naturally the Windows platform teams and managers didn't much care for that but Office saw it as an opportunity. The people doing the name calling are the ones within Microsoft that are competing against Linux not the ones that couldn't care less either way or want to port their projects to Linux to improve their customer base.

    In my opinion, when we see a dominant Linux platform (e.g. desktop environment, tool set etc) then we will also see a copy of Microsoft Office released. Microsoft will follow the market with most of its products.
    • You need to keep in mind that Microsoft is a very large company and each department is so large that it is almost like a company within its self. So if it is bad for the Windows Server team that the Virtual Server team has done this, well too bad. The Virtual Server team needs to keep their product competitive and they are just telling it as it is; they are an x86 system virtualizer and need to support popular x86 platforms, if they didn't then they deserve to die off.

      Otherwise known as "cost centre accou

  • by arpad1 ( 458649 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:24AM (#12302256)
    ...if Linux'll run.
  • by killproc ( 518431 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:24AM (#12302258)

    Originally submitted without MS bashing as:

    Hell Freezes Over-Thursday April 21, @08:37AM -Rejected
  • LMAO (Score:5, Funny)

    by tacocat ( 527354 ) <tallison1 AT twmi DOT rr DOT com> on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:26AM (#12302277)

    I wonder who will be the first one to run:

    • Linux Running VMware running...
      • Windows Running VirtualServer2005 running...
      • Linux Running WMware running...
    You get the idea..
    • Re:LMAO (Score:5, Funny)

      by tgd ( 2822 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:33AM (#12302337)
      Imagine a beowulf cluster of those!

      Can you cluster the external Linux box with the internal one?
    • Re:LMAO (Score:5, Funny)

      by meringuoid ( 568297 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @10:04AM (#12302632)
      You'd need a separate licence for each iteration... Of course, if you set it up just right you could send a Microsoft lawyer into an infinite loop, which would be a pretty cool science fair project.
    • Linux Running VMware running Windows Running VirtualServer2005 running FreeBSD running PearPC running OS X running MoM running BeOS running Sheepshaver running Mac OS running Bochs running Linux Running WMware running...
  • Sun came out with a PCi card [sun.com] that allowed people to run Windows NT in an X-server application window, primarily for CAD users who wanted to read Windows E-mail.

    And of course, there is Wine [winehq.com] which allows Windows application to run on Linux.

    So Microsoft are going to have to compete somehow.
  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:27AM (#12302286)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • For all of you out there who love the stability of linux, running under the instability of a host windows operating system.

    I don't see this functionality as likely to be used anywhere but the desktop (e.g. developers/etc. who want more than cygwin offers), which afaik isn't remotely their target for this?
  • by _am99_ ( 445916 )
    I booted Linux under Virtual PC a while back.

    All they are doing here is adding it as a supported functionality. Not that that doesn't count for something.

    Now if we could just boot Windows virtual machine from a Linux host with near native performence, then you'd really haev a break through.
  • This is cool (Score:5, Interesting)

    by CDarklock ( 869868 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:34AM (#12302343) Homepage Journal
    Now that Microsoft has given the thumbs up to Linux on Virtual PC, I can slaughter one of the big objections people have to moving web servers off Windows: the developers don't have a Linux box on their desktop. Now they can install Virtual PC and set up a test environment there, which kills the problem and might get some Windows web servers off the net.

    Not that I have a problem with Windows, but it makes a really *bad* web server.
    • by tweakt ( 325224 ) *
      This has been possible for YEARS using VMware. It is also a considerable more mature and feature rich product. I recently upgraded to version 5 and I have never felt better about supporting a commercial project (it is top quality stuff, and their linux release is also extremely well done and worth the money).

      VMware doesn't care what you run as a guest OS. I can basically write my own OS and it will boot. It emulates the virtual machine from the bare metal up, starting with a POST.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    My guess is that Microsoft will make sure that Linux works, sort of, but not quite right, or only specially modified versions will work. They will want everyone to see that Windows works better of course. So I don't imagine many people will end up actually using such a combination for Linux.
    • by ardor ( 673957 )
      This wouldn't work. Everyone would point at VMware with Linux running correctly. So, anyone interested in emulating Linux would ditch the MS virtual PC, and go for VMware instead.
      • by Trelane ( 16124 )
        The paranoid side of me is screaming that Microsoft is going to shoot this option down by making Windows not quite work as well when run under VMWare....
      • This is why competition is a Very Good Thing. Without VMWare to keep them honest, Microsoft would be doing exactly what the grandparent poster fears. I only wish that Microsoft's court conviction for anticompetitive behavior had carried with it much stiffer penalties and enforcement.
  • by McGregorMortis ( 536146 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:37AM (#12302366)
    Linux is... a cancer. And we... are the cure.
  • Why would anyone run Linux under windows? Apart from the performance degradation, you still have all the security/bloat/performance issues of having an MS OS somewhere in the loop.

    Also its probably too good an opportunity for Microsoft not to miss to engineer their virtualisation software to make Linux appear to perform worse/less stably than Windows.

  • is not the same as "announced suppot".

    Nevertheless, MS has cleverly played the...
    With MS you can run LInux but with LInux you can't run MS card...

    How to read this from a business POV?
  • Sabotage (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lead Butthead ( 321013 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:45AM (#12302447) Journal
    (from Webster online)
    Etymology: French, from saboter to clatter with sabots, botch, sabotage, from sabot

    This affair reminds me of the DR-DOS and Windows 3.1. All M$ has to do is to "support it" and quietly make sure what "support" they provide is broken in some strange way, and place the blame on Linux to [I]sabotage[/I] its adaptation. This way at a later date they can make the claim "users have made their choice. Linux is out."
    • Re:Sabotage (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Deagol ( 323173 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @11:35AM (#12303451) Homepage
      Linux, being open, is so quick to fix and get patches out, I doubt this will be a consideration. The fact that there are ways to detect if you're running within, say, VMware, leads me to believe the same is true for any virtualization system. So, there can be run-time tweaks to adapt to such an environment if MS gets sneaky this way. In fact, good distributions should detect and account for this fact during the install itself, as it would save possible headaches later on.

      I love VMware. However, I think they've gotten a little on on their horse these days (ditching the $100 hobby license), so I'm looking forward to them getting made irrelevant by upcoming open source options. plex86 (bochs spin-off) seems to have died of ennui, but Xen, user mode linux, and QEMU (going into the kernel, no?) are gonna overtake VMware fast.

      In fact, VMware reminds me of AcceleratedX 5 years ago. They got cocky, charged too much, then became irrelevant by the next major rev of X11 servers.

  • Not new... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Mad Merlin ( 837387 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:46AM (#12302451) Homepage
    Virtual PC has supported Linux as a guest for ages already, long before Microsoft bought them out. What would be more interesting is if they brought back support for OS/2 as a host OS, a feature which they immediately removed after buying the company out. Of course I'd expect nothing else from Microsoft, but oh well, maybe Microsoft still feels threatened by OS/2?
  • wtf? (Score:5, Funny)

    by SpongeBobLinuxPants ( 840979 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:46AM (#12302455) Homepage
    Wouldn't running Linux on top of Windows be kind of like stacking bricks on jello?
  • Didn't have a choice (Score:3, Interesting)

    by interiot ( 50685 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:52AM (#12302498) Homepage
    Intel, AMD, and IBM [google.com] are all contributing to the Open-Source project Xen, which should support hardware virtualization as soon as it's available [google.com], and will no longer require re-compiling the kernel. In short, open-source VMWare will be here to stay. Microsoft HAD to respond in some way. Whether they can parlay this into another Netscape vs. MSIE and actually come out on top (for a while) is yet to be seen. Either way, it's awesome to see Microsoft being forced to give at least a tiny bit of their market to linux.
  • by suitepotato ( 863945 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:53AM (#12302505)
    Windows inside Linux inside Windows inside MacOSX.

    So instead of one cross-platform standards-based language embodying write-one-run-anywhere, we do it the long way around.

    Yeah, this is a really great idea. "Our new PCs from Dell can run six different operating systems inside each other right out of the box. We call it the Mental Whiplash System."
  • by crovira ( 10242 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:58AM (#12302551) Homepage
    1)M$ gives up on Longhorn, has a BarBQue, adopts Linux and moves all its goodies over onto it.

    2) M$ gets a solid OS base.

    3) Linux gets a decent desktop. (Okay its no Mac but still.)

    4) $$$
  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @10:03AM (#12302618)
    Longhorn's late. Yukon's late. Ballmer, the deadline for April Fool's jokes are April 1st.
    [ducks]
  • Not really (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Mr_Silver ( 213637 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @10:06AM (#12302658)
    Perhaps the significance of this is that Microsoft has acknowledged Linux as an OS people might want to use, which seems an upgrade from its previous status as a communist cancer.

    Ignoring the age of the quote I see no reason why a company can't provide support in their product for a product they dislike or compete against. Hell, you've been able to import non-Microsoft file formats into their applications for years.

    Especially if it's going to mean that they're actually going to have a more competitive product or bring them more money.

  • by shippo ( 166521 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @10:40AM (#12302976)
    But does it run OS/2?
  • by ScrappyLaptop ( 733753 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @10:58AM (#12303158)
    ...by eliminating the need for it

    MS Press release, 2007:

    "New distribution format makes the OS irrelevant"

    "they are also going to license their virtual disk format royalty free"

    Now, if MS at some point included VPC on every desktop OS -don't laugh, it could happen, say five years from now- think of the possibilities.

    An "application" could be comprised of a very minimalist custom OS + only the specific functionality for the application needed. With a virtualized PC, you've got a completely standardized hardware platform, although one that is hardly performance oriented. For instance, the older VirtualPC used what, a virtualized 2-d video chipset without much "hardware" acceleration. You could package up an entire single-application Linux system in a very optimized disk file. The O/S need never be seen by the user.

    The next step will be customized vitual hardware+driver modules for VPC plugin, consisting of vitualized higher performance video chipsets, RAID, etc. Instead of "DLL" hell, ten years from now we'll have some sort of virtual hardware hell as the single simple standardized vitural hardware platform expands...

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @11:31AM (#12303412) Homepage Journal
    you get all the disadvantages of Linux with the advantages of massive downtime, unrealeased patches to Windows Server, and you get to pay tons of cash!

    Cool!

    Um, what was the question?

  • by PepeGSay ( 847429 ) on Thursday April 21, 2005 @01:44PM (#12304723)
    Microsoft acknowledges the Linux is a plaything and what better environment to play with something than in the nice little sandbox of a VM.
  • Embrace and Extend (Score:3, Insightful)

    by 0x0000 ( 140863 ) <zerohex AT zerohex DOT com> on Thursday April 21, 2005 @09:50PM (#12309817) Homepage

    Geez. How soon we forget. An entire page of commentary and no one has mentioned it yet, but that is the Microsoft strategy.

    Furthermore, there is no reason at all to believe that just because M$ says they bought VPC to compete with VMware that it is true. In fact, given Micro$history there's every reason not to believe it.

    Anybody got a pool on when we see the first Linux patch from M$ - the one that will let Linux run on VPC? Remember Java - they didn't "break it", they just "extended" it.

    And as for NT 4.0 support ... Phfft. They don't have any interest in supporting those kinds of antiques unless they're getting more $$ for it than they do for hacking together another OS-upgrade-support kludge.

    I predict VPC support from M$ will be very short-lived; it's a near term wedge they can use to deceive a small fraction of a small market into spending some money with M$, yes, but the real goal has to be exactly what the kind of stunt they pulled with Java. Copy it until they can't get away with it - create proprietary extensions, then produce a clone with a different naming scheme, sanitized binaries, and no traceable legal relation to the original product. Once they have that VPC will disapear, support will dry up, and anyone gullible enough to have bought it will be told to "upgrade".

    I'll say it again, Bill: the only thing you can do that stands a chance of keeping Microsoft in the software game long term is to release a Linux distro. Of course, you'll probably have to hire some developers, but from what I hear you won't have to pay US wages... Good Luck, and God Bless.

In practice, failures in system development, like unemployment in Russia, happens a lot despite official propaganda to the contrary. -- Paul Licker

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