SUBSCRIBE to SharePointPro Connections     Register today for your FREE "SharePointPro Connections UPDATE " eNewsletter

SUBSCRIBE to SharePointPro Connections     Register today for your FREE "SharePointPro Connections UPDATE " eNewsletter

     

 

     
Skip Navigation Links.
Collapse SharePoint SharePoint
Expand SharePointPro Connections MagazineSharePointPro Connections Magazine
Collapse SharePointPro Connections Update SharePointPro Connections Update
SharePoint Service Applications
SharePoint Content Management
SharePoint Beta
SharePoint On the Job
SharePoint Shines at the Olympics, Plus Office Olympics Winners, and a New Magazine
Potential SharePoint Pitfalls
SharePoint Printing--And SharePoint Fun On the Road
Discoverability and SharePoint 2010
More SharePoint MVP Predictions for 2010
SharePoint in 2010: SharePoint MVPs Offer 2010 Predictions
SharePoint 2010 Lists and a Question
SharePoint: Garbage and Governance
SharePoint and Social Networking With a Purpose: Next Steps
SharePoint Updates and Prereqs
SharePoint 2010 and Social Networking
SharePoint and Office Betas Released!
MOSS 2007 and SharePoint 2010: Walking the line between past and future
SharePoint Update: "Current" and "Next Version" News
SharePoint 2010: What a Difference 3 Years Makes
SharePoint Wish List: Does SharePoint 2010 Deliver?
Top 4 Things Devs Can Do to Prepare for 2010
Move Over, Miley--And Vegas, Baby!
Fundamentals: Implementing a Web Application
Web Apps and Webinars
Hyper-V? Not Me! Thank the Heavens for VMware Workstation
News in Review: Cool Tools and Hot Topics in SharePoint Land
My SharePoint Summer Vacation
Will Hardware Be a Deployment Blocker for SharePoint 2010?
Bad Practice #1: Not Using Solutions to Deploy Artifacts to SharePoint
Top 10 Best Practices for Document Libraries
The Curtain Rises (Just a Bit) on SharePoint 2010
Clearing the Fog: Office Integration with SharePoint
A Big Fix for a Big Oops
Information Architecture: Are We Talking the Same Language?
Wise and Not-So-Wise Choices, Part 3
Wise and Not-So-Wise Choices, Part 2
Wise and Not-So-Wise Choices, Part 1
Busy Month for SharePoint Enthusiast and SharePoint Product Group
What You Get with SharePoint SP2
Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010 Wish List
Big Wins with SharePoint: London, Lisbon, and LA
Revelations About Exchange 2010, SharePoint Server 2010, and MOSS 2007 SP2
Branded a Fool
Bil Simser Compiles Favorite CodePlex Projects
SharePoint Designer Kicks It Up a Notch
Social Networking and the Enterprise
Office 2010 Will Not Appear in 2009
SharePoint Goes to School with Moodle
Making Document Libraries More Accessible: Scripting Network Places and Network Locations
An Overview of SharePoint Pro Online Live!
Expand SharePoint Backup Strategies SharePoint Backup Strategies
October 16, 2007
Introducing Office and SharePoint Pro
Windows SharePoint Services and Windows Server File for Divorce
What Do You Think? New Products and Addons Forums
Use Kerberos to Secure MOSS 2007
The SharePoint Capacity Planning Tool
Service Packalooza
SharePoint News for the New Year
SharePoint Migration Secrets
SharePoint Replication
Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista SP1: What They Mean to SharePoint
SharePoint and Forms-based Authentication
The SharePoint Permissions Model
Microsoft Online Services Offers SharePoint to Businesses of All Sizes
SharePoint: What Do YOU Think?
STSADM at Your Service
Adding Templates for Top-Level Sites
Taking the Pulse of the SharePoint Community
Big News on the Collaboration Front from Telligent
SharePoint Report Card: Search
Report from the Microsoft MVP Summit 2008
Summary of SharePoint Scenario Report Cards
Got Yahoo!? I’m so sorry.
Implementing Folder Content Types
License to Fill: Licensing Windows SharePoint Services for the Extranet
Licensing Windows SharePoint Services
News from Tech Ed, Installing WSS on Vista—a Rave and Rant, and More
Tech Ed 2008 Wrap-Up
Great Stuff
MOSS 2007 Applications in the Business World
Microsoft Online Makes a Big Splash in the Services Pool
Comparing InfoPath and SharePoint Designer Forms
Comparing InfoPath and SharePoint Designer Forms, Part 2
Migrating Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 to a Different Server
Microsoft Office SharePoint Server and Excel Services
SharePoint Sharing from Beijing
Olympics Diary
SharePoint’s Role in Bringing the Games to the Web
Email-Enabling SharePoint Document Libraries and Lists
Back to Reality
SharePoint's "Big" Problems
If You Build It Right, They Will Come
Deploying Shortcuts and Favorites to SharePoint Sites
SharePointers
Easy Answers about Document Libraries (Part I): Overriding Check Out
Spiral Development, the 80/20 Rule and SharePoint
SharePoint Calendar Tips
Sharepoint Futures
Excel Services and Excel Integration with SharePoint
My Migration to Microsoft Online
SharePoint Online's Debut
A Microsoft Online Report Card
Links, Links Everywhere...
Creating a Custom Advanced Search by Building Strings with JavaScript
If Steve Ballmer Were Santa, and I Were on His Lap
MVP Predictions for 2009
Making History
Scorecards and Dashboards and Mysteries... oh my!
SharePoint 14 and Office 14
Supporting the Community
Report from the MVP Global Summit: No Serious Injuries
Microsoft Announces FAST Search Roadmap
Office 2010 Won't Appear in 2009
Terst Test
Expand Office 2007Office 2007
Expand Office 2003Office 2003
     

Visit SharePointProSummit.com


Visit SharePointProSummit.com

     


     
     

Hyper-V? Not Me! Thank the Heavens for VMware Workstation

Hyper-V? Not Me! Thank the Heavens for VMware Workstation

If you've read my commentaries in the past, you know that I'm generally a fan of Microsoft's products mostly because of the incredible ROI that I see them provide to my clients every day. So, it takes a lot for me to completely shun a Microsoft product, but I'm going to take a stand for every developer, trainer, and non-data-center virtual machine (VM) user out there and scream bloody murder: ENOUGH IS ENOUGH! Hyper-V just isn't cutting it. Microsoft is going to lose out big time if they don't step up to the plate VERY soon.

Let me start by isolating the real workload to which Hyper-V is targeted: the data center. There's a very good story here. Given that Microsoft had nothing to offer two years ago, the company has made amazing strides. Microsoft is right to be proud of its very rapid progress in that market. My colleagues who spend real time with Hyper-V and VMware Workstation, however, inform me that the latest updates from VMware improve performance in ways that "smoke" Hyper-V. With Microsoft's advantage of tight integration with its other products and VMware's advantage of having better interoperability with non-Microsoft products, I expect we'll be seeing a back-and-forth tug of war for market dominance as each company releases new versions that offer improved performance and features. The data center story remains interesting for Hyper-V.

HOWEVER, what I'm disgusted with is Microsoft's embarrassing and ludicrous virtualization offerings outside the data center. In order for developers to code for Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 (MOSS 2007), they need to run a server, as do trainers, testers, and many others. In my world, I regularly demonstrate, test, provide training on, and write about SharePoint, so I have a laptop that travels with me and VMs that contain my domain and farm. Microsoft continues to tell us to use Hyper-V, but Hyper-V requires a server host OS—Windows Server 2008 or Server 2008 R2, specifically—which instantly adds complexity, incompatibility, and impossibility.

Server 2008 R2 may be a fine base OS for a server but not for a laptop. Bluetooth isn't supported, limiting your choice of devices. There's no media center support, so options for background entertainment while you work are limited. Standby isn't an option once Hyper-V is installed ("flying brick" anyone?). More important, there are licensing issues (bad) and incompatibilities (show stoppers) with some applications that aren't meant to run on a server OS. Finally, there's a serious performance problem related to the hypervisor and modern video cards to which Microsoft's official response is "Use a standard VGA driver". Even some of the bloggers who used to detail how to create the "perfect Server 2008 laptop" have given up. There are too many show stoppers.

Microsoft's desktop virtualization story is pathetic. While forcing us into a corner with Hyper-V, progress has stopped on Virtual PC and Virtual Server. They are nearly impossible to get running effectively (and impossible to get full fidelity functionality out of) on Windows 7 and even Vista SP2. And they support only 32-bit hosts, meaning "dead end" with Server 2008 R2, SharePoint 2010, etc. Virtual PC and Virtual Server are dead. Not that I mind—with their poor interfaces, management capabilities, and performance, they should have been put down a long time ago. But something else should have been put forward!

So you can use Hyper-V work but be crippled when it comes time to show a PowerPoint presentation or video, or you can steer clear of Hyper-V and work productively. I'm choosing the latter because luckily there are many desktop virtualization products to choose from. Some of my colleagues are even turning to the open source VirtualBox, but I will proudly stand by the one and only piece of software that has served me reliably for the better part of a decade: VMware Workstation. I don't know where I'd be without it. Rock solid, fast, easy to manage, rich snapshot capabilities, incredible support for devices (what good is a desktop VM if you can't plug something into it?), easy transfer of machines (no Import/Export Hyper-V nonsense)...the list goes on and on and on.

I tried so hard this summer to fit Hyper-V into my work, training, and production model, but it just can't be done. Even under my own heavy pressure to leave VMware behind, VMware Workstation's superior capabilities won me over. I'll still be a fan of many Microsoft products, but when you see me present at SharePoint Connections in Las Vegas this November, I'll be using VMware!