What Are You Doing Right Now
-
The industry I work in is the SMB, not the enterprise - so fine, I'll give you that the Enterprise has had virtualization for many decades, but SMB (which is the point of SW and Mangolassi - or so I thought) surely hasn't been using it but for just north of a decade.
-
@Dashrender said:
The industry I work in is the SMB, not the enterprise - so fine, I'll give you that the Enterprise has had virtualization for many decades, but SMB (which is the point of SW and Mangolassi - or so I thought) surely hasn't been using it but for just north of a decade.
Lots of the SMB was, even then. Back then the SMB didn't normally use IA32 servers either. IBM AS/400, RS/6000, Sparc, MIPS, Alpha and VMS VAX systems were common. Sure IA32 was popular too, more popular by 1994 for sure in the SMB, but the SMB only had a small window of not being virtualized in general and only some.
The article said obscurity. By 1998 even in the pure SMB virtualization was not obscure at all. It was something people did at home. Claiming that in 2006 it was obscure is absurd. It was old hat even in the pure SMB IA32 circles by then.
-
To give some perspective again... Solaris went to 100% virtualized with containers (like Docker today) in 2004. Not offering it as an option, they stopped offering anything else at that point.
-
hmm... OK I knew many SMBs who did have an AS400 - I have no idea if they used virtualization.
Was virtualization on those platforms even remotely like what VMWare ESXi, or Hyper-V is today? Full individual OSes separated from each other by a hypervisor? or where they more like containers today or is it docker? (I actually don't understand either of those technologies in the slightest). -
Has anyone used or set up a Ubiquiti USG? Are the lack of options worth it for the centralized management?
-
@Dashrender said:
hmm... OK I knew many SMBs who did have an AS400 - I have no idea if they used virtualization.
Did it say AS/400 on it? It was virtualized All of those systems were. They probably only ran one VM as we often do today, but the virtualization was baked into the hardware it was always there.
-
@Dashrender said:
Was virtualization on those platforms even remotely like what VMWare ESXi, or Hyper-V is today? Full individual OSes separated from each other by a hypervisor?
No, generally it was much more advanced. Doing virtualization in software is cheap and easy but can't do still all of the things that they could do back then.
-
My dad just found this...
http://www.msn.com/en-us/video/wonder/5-most-dangerous-volcanoes
So yeah, number two is Apoyeque just an hour from here to the north.
-
Just watched last nights South Park. I'm loving this season!!
-
Wife wants me to go to the store. I can hear the thunder coming. We need some rain, the humidity has been bad.
-
Huge thunderstorm here. I did not make it out to the store.
-
@scottalanmiller I love thunderstorms
-
Me too, they are my favourite.
-
Planning for a job interview I might have tomorrow for a possible third job!
-
This one is less than a mile from my place!
-
You are trying hard to make up for being jobless for a month there!
-
@scottalanmiller said:
You are trying hard to make up for being jobless for a month there!
Two months...
-
@thanksajdotcom said:
@scottalanmiller said:
You are trying hard to make up for being jobless for a month there!
Two months...
And yes, I'm working my bloomin' ass off!
-
Just destroyed my old cloud server. That's a scary feeling.
-
@johnhooks said:
Just destroyed my old cloud server. That's a scary feeling.
watches for mushroom cloud