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Mendel Rosenblum envisions a world run by virtualization appliances where software makers wouldn't need a bulky or complex OS.

 

In the view of Mendel Rosenblum, chief scientist and co-founder of virtualization vendor VMware, today's modern operating system is destined for the dustbin, a scenario unlikely to please Microsoft or any of the Linux vendors.

 

Rosenblum's keynote on Thursday wrapped up the LinuxWorld conference in San Francisco, preaching the virtues of virtualization, which he believes will eventually make today's complex, some would say bloated, operating systems obsolete. "It's just going to go away," Rosenblum said.

 

Not surprisingly, Rosenblum favors a world in which a virtualization layer is tied directly to the microprocessor and other related hardware of a computer. Running on top of this layer would be virtual machines, or mini-operating systems, that would be designed to run specific applications. Merging the OS and software would create a module that would be more reliable and secure, easier to manage and offer higher performance.

  
posted on Saturday, August 11, 2007 8:42 AM

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# Or maybe not 8/11/2007 10:35 PM Martin Hinshelwood
The problem I see with this approch is inter-application interaction? Where is the pace for this in this virtualised application world. Will it still be posible to write some code that would interact with this and that app withour the need to write a web service that they both interacted with?

I think for specific applications this approch has its place. But the desktop will be hear to stay...

I am not saying that we should not virtualise our desktops. My desctop runs in a SAN with virtual hardware provided by VMWare and I think it is very workable...It means that I can sit at any desk in the world and log into my own Virtual Workstation and it is more secure for remote access as you do not need VPN, just a remote desktop (not nesseseraly MS RDP) window into your VW. This alllows me to walk into an internet cafe and still be secure in accessing my VW...

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