Nutanix Ready, KVM & RHEV

Nutanix Ready, KVM & RHEV

Nutanix Ready certification achieved by UDS Enterprise, the growing success of KVM Linux hypervisor and the integration of our multiplatform connection broker for Windows & Linux and Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) have been the most read posts in our blog during the last two weeks.

Find below the link to these topics in case you dind’t have the chance to read them yet:

UDS Enterprise achieves Nutanix Ready certification

The promising future for KVM

Video: UDS Enterprise & RHEV VDI

Active Directory tools for backup & restore

Active Directory tools for backup & restore

Active Directory (AD) is one of the most used features in Windows Server. It enables administrators to manage devices and users implementing and reinforcing security policies. It also provides a centralized and hierarchical directory to manage all network resources.

In this post we’re talking about tools and best practices to ease restore & backup processes in AD.

Tips to manage Hyper-V

Tips to manage Hyper-V

Are you a Hyper-V user? Don’t miss these useful tips by Virtualization Review:

-Use PowerShell to create a list of all your virtual machines(VM) including name and IP address without logging or going to networking tab.

-Enable router guard and DHCP guard options to avoid unauthorized networking accesses. You can do it using VM libraries, PowerShell or Set-VMNetworkAdapter cmdlet.

The promising future for KVM

The promising future for KVM

KVM has made a place for itself among the industry’s most outstanding hypervisors for Linux. Currently, this hipervisor is deployed in a wide variety of processor architectures; even in mobile devices.

In addition, KVM is an important element in Network Functions Virtualization (NFV), since it drives the networking software to hardware with high performance and low cost.

More than 98% of supercomputers run Linux

More than 98% of supercomputers run Linux

Top500.org has published one more time the list of the 500 world’s most powerful supercomputers. And once more, Linux is the operating system with the strongest presence in these machines.

98’8% of supercomputers run Linux, and the remaining 1,2% run Unix.

This list is published twice a year and the last six rankings had Tianhe-2 in the first position. This supercomputer was developed by China’s National University of Defense Technology

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