Yup, indeed it does.

Also, there is no comparison between any version of ESX & HyPer-V

At the moment, ESX wins hands down on all fronts. MS will probably catch up in 
around 10 years.
S

-----Original Message-----
From: Al Lilianstrom [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 12, 2008 6:10 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: RE: Hyper V vs VMWare ESXi

ESXi will run on white boxes and desktops. I have run it on a Dell 
Optiplex 620 and there is a whole community of folks running it on 
whiteboxes.

Google esx white box

Particularly the link - http://communities.vmware.com/thread/98225

Lots of people are running esx and ESXi on cheap hardware.

        al
--
Al Lilianstrom
CD/LSC/CSI/CSG
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


From: Carl Houseman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, November 12, 2008 12:48 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Hyper V vs VMWare ESXi

The basic differences between the two free products - Hyper-V Server 
2008 (hereafter HVS08) vs. ESXi , are:

ESXi has specific requirements on server and storage hardware.  Those 
requirements are far more restrictive than HVS08 - for example you won't 
be able to run ESXi on a white box or desktop.   HVS08 will run on any 
hardware with driver support for Windows 2008.

HVS08 requires 64-bit and Intel-VT or AMD-V CPU support.  ESXi can run 
on older server platforms that predate those features.

ESXi allows over-subscription of memory.  That means you could run two 
VMs allocated 4 GB each on a machine with less than 8 GB.  HVS08 has 
almost as much RAM overhead as running it under Windows Server 2008 Core 
- so you would need about 9 GB to run two 4GB VMs.

Carl

From: Reimer, Mark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, November 12, 2008 12:21 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Hyper V vs VMWare ESXi

Hi folks,

I know this has been discussed earlier, but it has been a few months, 
and (iirc) VMWare ESXi has come out since then. Also I think/hope some 
of the experts here have had a chance to try Hyper-V and/or ESXi a bit 
more, and might have more comments.

I am under financial restraints, and thus the full ESX version, or other 
paid products, will not be viable for me. At this point, I'm looking at 
virtualizing a few web servers, using MS Server 2003. These are front 
end machines that "hook" to a back end SQL servers. A couple of these 
web servers get very little traffic, and some will have more. I'll look 
into Enterprise and DataCenter versions because of the multiple copies 
on a virtual server that are allowed.

I'm planning on using the local server for disk storage, no NAS/SAN 
involved. I do have the hardware that can run the virtual software 
necessary (maybe need some more RAM).

My question. Preference? Also any new links that might compare the two? 
I might also look into Xen/Citrix free version, so if anybody has 
comments on that, please let me know.

Thanks.

Mark


~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
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~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

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