Intel is
preparing to launch the next generation of its
vPro
platform on 27 August,
vnunet.com
has learned.
The chipmaker will also reveal
Dell as the
latest partner for its enterprise desktop platform, according to sources
familiar with the matter. Spokespersons for Intel and Dell declined to comment.
Intel's vPro platform aims to reduce the costs of managing client computers.
The technology allows IT staff to remotely power up computers, for instance, and
install updates without requiring physical access to the system.
The technology also supports virtual software management appliances that run
as a virtual host next to the system's main operating system.
Lenovo
is currently the only vendor shipping an appliance, but others including
Symantec
are scheduled to follow.
Formerly
codenamed
Weybridge, the new vPro will introduce Intel's hardware-based Trusted
Execution Technology formerly known by its LeGrande codename.
The platform also offers an updated version of Intel's Active Management
Technology and adds support for the Web Services Management and Desktop &
Mobile Working Group industry standards.
The introduction of industry standard management technologies is likely to
have been the persuading factor for Dell, which is currently the only major PC
maker not shipping vPro systems.
Dell is likely to unveil and start shipping its first vPro workstations on
Monday, sources confirmed to
vnunet.com.
The first version of vPro that Intel unveiled in May 2006 relied on the
firm's proprietary Active Management Technology.
Although most major PC makers including
Acer,
HP and Lenovo
quickly picked up the Intel technology, Dell held back.
In an
interview
with
vnunet.com
last November, Margaret Franco, Dell's director for the OptiPlex line of
business, complained that the platform lacked openness.
"When customers really start deploying [management] technology, we think it
will be in a new industry standard format," Franco said at the time.
"There should be a communication mechanism such that the industry can
innovate within that open standard."
Intel is already working on a future version of vPro. The current iteration
uses a proprietary hypervisor technology to run the management appliance and the
user's operating system. The management appliance is limited to Windows CE.
Intel
unveiled
a partnership with
Red Hat in
May to design a future vPro version that will be based on Red Hat Linux and use
the Xen open source technology.
In addition to Windows CE, virtual appliance vendors will also be able to
run their
software on Linux.
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