Microsoft's
last minute decision not to ease
virtualisation
restrictions for Windows Vista is an "unjustified" attempt to "delay market
adoption of competitive virtualisation software", analyst firm Gartner said in a
new analysis.
The software giant was planning to change the licensing terms for Vista Home
Basic and Vista Home Premium, allowing users to run the software in a virtual
compartment.
The changes would further ease virtualisation restrictions for Vista Ultimate
and Vista Business, which currently lack support for the Bitlocker data
encryption technology and have restrictions on digital rights management.
But Microsoft pulled the planned changes at the last minute without
explanation.
Gartner claims that Microsoft is delaying the licensing changes because it
wants to slow down the desktop virtualisation market. The firm currently lacks a
competitive virtualisation product and is not expected to catch up until 2009.
"Microsoft has a strong motivation to delay," wrote Gartner fellows Brian
Gammage and Neil MacDonald, and research vice president Michael Silver.
The enterprise market for running a virtual desktop is currently limited to
application testing for developers and security researchers.
Apple users have jumped on desktop virtualisation as way to run Windows XP
and ensure access to applications which are not available on the OS X platform.
But Gartner noted that lifting virtualisation restrictions could increase
Vista sales from Mac users.
Enterprises could eventually use desktop virtualisation to create so-called
portable clients, where a user's operating system, application and data are
stored on a central server.
All the data would be transferred to a virtual compartment on the computer
where the user logs in, but this is currently impossible because of the DRM and
Bitlocker restrictions.
Microsoft offers free desktop virtualisation through its
Virtual
PC 2007, but the software is considered inferior to competing products from
vendors such as
VMware and
SWSoft,
maker of the Parallels software.
Microsoft is also trailing behind its competitors in creating a
virtualisation technology that relies on a hypervisor.
Instead of relying on a standalone virtualisation application such as Virtual
PC 2007, hypervisor-based virtualisation is embedded into the main operating
system which allows for better performance.
Microsoft has previously justified its virtualisation restrictions by arguing
that virtualisation presents the user with security risks. The restrictions are
intended to limit the technology to educated users and businesses.
Gartner dismissed these arguments as "overblown" and "fundamentally no
different than those posed by consumers running Windows as 'administrators'
today".
The analyst recommended that users looking for a virtual desktop use Windows
XP, which has no restrictions in its licence.
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