Mike, your suggestions are right on! I think providing a feature
comparison with KVM vs. VMWare would be useful. I editted Mike's
message below to those points I agree with most.
I too would spend the money on a book solely on virtualization with
KVM and Ubuntu.
--Physical -> virtual server transi
ome clearer :-)
> >
> > So I am not sure how much this helps you as it is far more information
> > that would be included in a single chapter on Virtualization ... but I
> > think tying in JeOS would be great as would importing VMWare virtual
> > machines as well as w
reat as would importing VMWare virtual
> machines as well as ways to remotely administer virtual machines.
>
> I will try and get back to you on my experience the second time round
> now that my "server" machine is free to have ubuntu loaded on to it
> again. This may
> Looking at the table of contents on Amazon, it doesn't appear that you cover
> Ubuntu as a mail server in the current edition. Is that planned for the next
> edition or the advanced book? I'm going a lot of work to make mail server
> setup more accessible in Intrepid and I'm curious if you
r@lists.ubuntu.com> Subject: Re: Ubuntu Server Book Needed?> > On
Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 09:13:05PM +, Mike Lane wrote:> > I actually have the
first book that you linked too and have found it> > pretty useful so far. I was
actually very disappointed with the> > section o
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 09:13:05PM +, Mike Lane wrote:
> I actually have the first book that you linked too and have found it
> pretty useful so far. I was actually very disappointed with the
> section on virtualization though which very briefly covers KVM, Xen
> and I forget the third one off
On Sunday 13 July 2008 04:11, Sander van Vugt wrote:
> Hi Mike,
>
> I'm the author of the beginning book. Currently working on the second
> edition (and an advanced book as well, both will be out by Q4 this
> year). I'm interested in your comments about the virtualization chapter.
> Would you be wi
On the topic of Ubuntu virtualization and books...
For the last year, I've been creating and maintaining public Ubuntu
images (AMIs) for Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) which is an
increasingly popular virtual server environment based on Xen. I've also
been fostering a growing community
Hi Mike,
I'm the author of the beginning book. Currently working on the second
edition (and an advanced book as well, both will be out by Q4 this
year). I'm interested in your comments about the virtualization chapter.
Would you be willing to provide some more in-depth feedback on that
chapter
I would think that there is interest in this.
I actually have the first book that you linked too and have found it pretty
useful so far. I was actually very disappointed with the section on
virtualization though which very briefly covers KVM, Xen and I forget the third
one off the top of my
On Friday 11 July 2008 13:43, Megan Yockey wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> Megan with Manning Publications here. I normally do not post general
> inquiries about books to technical mailing lists, but in this case I
> was encouraged to do so, so here goes.
>
> I'm seeking feedback from the community regard
> To your question of whether it is "still needed" or not, I can only say that
> if your book provides plenty of real world examples, it is definitely
> needed.
I want to emphasize that, as well. Along with my other suggestions, I
will say that real world examples (or "use cases") can help users
u
Megan,
I can only speak for myself, but as an IT Manager, I appreciate having good
quality technical resources at hand. Sometimes, having it in print is just
better as I can take a book places to read that a laptop just isn't the best
idea.
That being said, I cannot stress enough the "good qualit
On 7/11/08, Megan Yockey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> Megan with Manning Publications here. I normally do not post general
> inquiries about books to technical mailing lists, but in this case I was
> encouraged to do so, so here goes.
>
>
> I'm seeking feedback from the community re
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