What Are You Doing Right Now
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@jt1001001 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
talking ugh faxing with my boss ugh again
haha my girlfriend asked me to fax something just the other day for her, and I asked her where the item was that needed to be faxed, she said her email..
Um... no, we're emailing that.
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Winding my way through upgrading everyone here to SSDs and Windows 10 before the deadline. Decided to wait until the last two weeks like the procrastinator I am.
Going swimmingly so far. Not one comment. Everyone is like ... what is different, oh and I LOVE these pictures!
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@BRRABill said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Winding my way through upgrading everyone here to SSDs and Windows 10 before the deadline. Decided to wait until the last two weeks like the procrastinator I am.
Going swimmingly so far. Not one comment. Everyone is like ... what is different, oh and I LOVE these pictures!
I wish I had users who wanted Win 10. We have like 1 machine for testing, that's it. Our devs (and management) are convinced that 7 is the greatest OS of all time (or the only one that will work with our dev environment).
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We are pretty much all over to Windows 10, have been for most of a year now. Some machines made the tradition like ten months ago.
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I think a good portion of us were on 10 during the first week or 2 of beta.
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We're moving all of our labs to 10 and all new machines deployed to users are 10. We're hoping to be all Windows 10 by next summer.
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In the office I only have 1 windows 10 system (excluding tablets) and it's a VM.
I've been using it for a very long time, the powers that be are afraid to upgrade for some reason. Yet there is no reason to have this fear, we are a Microsoft business, word and power point are the bread and butter.
If those don't work on Windows 10, well *&%$ I guess Microsoft better fix that....
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@Minion-Queen said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
I think a good portion of us were on 10 during the first week or 2 of beta.
Yup, I was actually one of the last because I waited for a new laptop rather than migrating the old. And I went over on my secondary laptop in December.
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I actually like it.
And the upgrade (I went with upgrading no clean install) has been flawless so far. I am actually pretty impressed.
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I have it in a dual boot with 7 on my desktop at work. I would be using it completely if my intel dual NIC had a driver that would let me team again... So, an intel problem, not MS...
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So I was reading this article about hyper-v which stated:
"Hyper-V supports both emulated and Hyper-V-specific devices for Linux and FreeBSD virtual machines."Now, does Hyper-V specific devices mean proprietary devices or does that mean anything running Hyper-V? Is this the best choice if I want to run both Linux and Windows VM's?
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
So I was reading this article about hyper-v which stated:
"Hyper-V supports both emulated and Hyper-V-specific devices for Linux and FreeBSD virtual machines."Now, does Hyper-V specific devices mean proprietary devices or does that mean anything running Hyper-V?
This means the exact same thing as every hypervisor... all enterprise type 1 hypervisors support the same OSes (essentially) and all do so using paravirtualized drivers to get adequate performance, without them the system is a dog in all cases. VMware, Hyper-V, Xen / XenServer, KVM and its derivatives are all exactly the same. All of them have PV drivers for Windows, Linux and FreeBSD (some have a few more) and all need it for good performance. All support full emulation for compatibility reasons, never do you want to use that.
Only one of the four that has something unique here is Xen which offers an additional pure-PV option that none of the others do.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
So I was reading this article about hyper-v which stated:
"Hyper-V supports both emulated and Hyper-V-specific devices for Linux and FreeBSD virtual machines."Now, does Hyper-V specific devices mean proprietary devices or does that mean anything running Hyper-V?
This means the exact same thing as every hypervisor... all enterprise type 1 hypervisors support the same OSes (essentially) and all do so using paravirtualized drivers to get adequate performance, without them the system is a dog in all cases. VMware, Hyper-V, Xen / XenServer, KVM and its derivatives are all exactly the same. All of them have PV drivers for Windows, Linux and FreeBSD (some have a few more) and all need it for good performance. All support full emulation for compatibility reasons, never do you want to use that.
Only one of the four that has something unique here is Xen which offers an additional pure-PV option that none of the others do.
ML seems to prefer Hyper-V. What is the reasoning for the preference if they are all the same?
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Is this the best choice if I want to run both Linux and Windows VM's?
Define best choice? You tack this on at the end of a question about PV drivers; so I am guessing that you are reading way too much into "Hyper-V is just like everyone else."
That Hyper-V doesn't significantly lag here isn't a selling point. It's not a caveat either. It's just "doing the same thing as everyone else." Nothing wrong with that, but hardly a reason to jump to "best choice."
Hyper-V is one of the four possible choices and one of the three that give you unlimited use for free. Beyond that, defining your goals and measures of success is needed. Nothing you've stated would be a factor in determining if Hyper-V would be a good choice for you.
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@wirestyle22 said
ML seems to prefer Hyper-V. What is the reasoning for the preference if they are all the same?
Do they?
I kind of got the feel they like XenServer.
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
ML seems to prefer Hyper-V. What is the reasoning for the preference if they are all the same?
It does? A few people do. It's definitely not disliked. But I think you'll find that the number of people using and promoting, and the number of threads about, and the number of vendors supporting Xen and XenServer is like 10:1 over Hyper-V. And KVM gets a bit of love as well.
Hyper-V might easily be third or fourth in popularity around here. I might be wrong, I'm just going by what I remember seeing. But I think that is MS was looking at the site they'd feel very differently than you do.
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@BRRABill said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
I kind of got the feel they like XenServer.
That's my feeling, for deploying your own hypervisor I'd say that Xen has so much attention and mind share here that it is almost a problem, we've become a Xen proxy support community making it a bit unwelcoming to people on other platforms. Not that I would like to see fewer Xen posts, but I'd like to see more non-Xen posts, you know?
And KVM gets a huge amount of love because they are both baked into most Linux as well as the basis for products like Scale that gets a lot of attention.
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I love my Pandora shuffle... sometimes it goes from Pink Floyd to Meshuggah to Eek-A-Mouse, and that makes me smile.
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@scottalanmiller said
That's my feeling, for deploying your own hypervisor I'd say that Xen has so much attention and mind share here that it is almost a problem, we've become a Xen proxy support community making it a bit unwelcoming to people on other platforms. Not that I would like to see fewer Xen posts, but I'd like to see more non-Xen posts, you know?
I'd actually like to see some of those XS experts from their forum pop over here. To tidy up all the little things we can't figure out on our own.
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If performance is your guide, KVM has the best Windows performance. And Xen has the best Linux performance.
If ease of use is your guide, many of us find XenServer to be the easiest to learn (after VMware which is mostly only easy by not having any features.) Hyper-V is confusing enough that many people can get XS installed and working before they can even figure out what Hyper-V is But people used to the MS ecosystem thoroughly sometimes find it easier to use because they are already using many of the Windows remote management tools, but tons of Windows Admins don't do that making Hyper-V rather confusing again.
If features is your guide, XenServer and Hyper-V top the list for sure. Massive feature sets, all for free. KVM comes it right behind them. VMware isn't in the game there, unless you have insanely deep pockets.