Slashdot Mirror


An Overview of Virtualization

IndioMan writes to point us to an overview of virtualization — its history, an analysis of the techniques used over the years, and a survey of Linux virtualization projects. From the article: "Virtualization is the new big thing, if 'new' can include something over four decades old. It has been used historically in a number of contexts, but a primary focus now is in the virtualization of servers and operating systems. Much like Linux, virtualization provides many options for performance, portability, and flexibility."

1 of 119 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Apple by diamondsw · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Let's see, why don't they do virtualization...
    • They don't want you to use OS X in a VM, as it makes it trivial to use it on generic PC's, which eliminates the vast majority of their revenue.
    • They don't include virtualization software themselves as Parallels and VMWare are doing a good job if you need such a thing, and they don't want to alienate them.
    • And not strictly virtualization, but you mentioned it - they don't want to make it easy to use OS 9. It's been dead to them for years (and porting Classic to Intel would not have been easy, given the way Rosetta works). Meanwhile, they do nothing to hinder or help SheepShaver and others; the ROM files needed are available from Apple's website (although not easy to find).


    None of this is hard to figure out. Yes, there are reasons it would be nice, but it's pretty obvious why they're not too keen on it.
    --
    I don't know what kind of crack I was on, but I suspect it was decaf.