Microsoft Enhances Interoperability with Open Virtualisation Format


Irrevocable Promise Will Make Microsoft's Virtualisation Format Software Freely Available to All

BRUSSELS, Belgium, October 17 -- Microsoft Corp (Nasdaq: MSFT) today announced at the Interoperability Summit in Brussels that its virtualisation format technology will now be available under its Open Specification Promise (OSP), an irrevocable promise from Microsoft to every individual and organisation in the world to make use of this patented technology for free, now and forever when implementing specified open standards. Microsoft first announced the availability of an OSP for web services specifications in September 2006 and now is expanding its customer-focused commitment to interoperability by applying the OSP to Microsoft's Virtual Hard Disk (VHD) Image Format specification.

Virtualisation allows IT professionals to pool resources; for example, one computer can run many operating systems and applications at the same time. The result is that organisations can better manage complexity, increase agility and reduce costs. Many IT professionals believe virtualisation will be among the most important technology advancements in the next few years.

Microsoft's VHD format, which has been available since May 2005, captures the entire virtual machine operating system and the application stack in a single file. With the VHD format as a freely available specification, Microsoft is contributing to the continued expansion of the virtualisation market by fostering interoperability among all commercial software solutions, including open source.

"We are focused on delivering interoperability by design," said Bob Muglia, senior vice president of the Server and Tools Business at Microsoft."This means that customers have control over their data while vendors provide technologies that connect diverse systems. By having the VHD specification available under the OSP, the technology is viable for any development or business model. We continue to increase our commitment to interoperability in our products and by providing access to technologies like the virtualisation open format."

Helping developers build innovative and interoperable solutions regardless of the development or licensing model, the OSP has been praised by such industry figures as Red Hat Deputy General Counsel Mark Webbink and former General Counsel for the Open Source Initiative Larry Rosen for clarifying the legal concerns surrounding Microsoft's IP. Similar to the OSP applied to web service specifications, the OSP for the VHD format will promote further industry interoperability.

Others in the industry support Microsoft's move to make the OSP applicable to the VHD format:

o "Virtualisation is an essential layer in Fujitsu Siemens' Dynamic Data
Center, which can offer enterprise customers improved management and
flexibility using virtual machine products on PRIMERGY Servers," said
Jens-Peter Seick, vice president at Fujitsu Siemens Computers. "VHD
will certainly set an important new standard in the area of server
virtualisation. A common virtualisation format like VHD helps provide
more seamless manageability, security, reliability and cost-efficiency
for customers, and it helps ensure a uniform product support system."
o "Virtual Iron is committed to enabling the benefits of dynamic
infrastructure and policy-based management, regardless of which
virtualisation technology a customer selects," said Mike Grandinetti,
chief marketing officer at Virtual Iron Software Inc. "By adopting
Microsoft's VHD format, Virtual Iron is leveraging a rapidly emerging
industry standard. Our comprehensive Virtual Infrastructure Management
Platform, which supports advanced capabilities such as the transparent
migration of virtual servers between physical servers with zero
downtime, will provide users with the ability to manage virtual
machines in the VHD format."
o "We are pleased to collaborate with Microsoft to deliver interoperable
virtualisation solutions to the market," said Simon Crosby, chief
technology officer of XenSource Inc. "Today, we use Microsoft's VHD
format to consume virtual machines that are created in Microsoft
Virtual Server and get them up and running on XenEnterprise(TM).
Longer term, we're jointly developing technology so that Xen(TM) --
enabled Linux guests will run on Windows Server® virtualisation
when it becomes available with the future version of Windows Server,
code-named 'Longhorn.'"

As a common virtualisation file format, VHD has been adopted by more than 60 vendors, enabling partners such as Brocade Communications Systems Inc, BMC Software Inc, Diskeeper Corp, Fujitsu Siemens Computers, Network Appliance Inc, Virtual Iron and XenSource to help provide more seamless manageability, security features, reliability and cost efficiency for customers. Customers and partners realise the value of standardising on the Microsoft VHD format because it is the Microsoft virtualisation file format and offers migration across Microsoft Virtual Server, Virtual PC, and Windows Server virtualisation with Windows Server "Longhorn." The OSP will help further broad adoption of the VHD format. Microsoft launched its increased commitment to interoperability with the formation of the Interoperability Customer Executive Council in June 2006 and has continued this work through projects such as the open source Open XML Translator, technical collaborations with AOL LLC and Yahoo! Inc to help consumers reach across instant messenger community boundaries, a virtualisation technical collaboration with XenSource, and the release of the OSP for 35 web services protocols.

More information about Microsoft's commitment to interoperability by design and the list of specifications covered by the OSP today can be found at www.microsoft.com/interop

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Source: Microsoft Corp

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