Sun has announced that it has entered into a
stock purchase agreement for desktop virtualisation vendor Innotek. Sun said the
acquisition would allow its xVM platform to be expanded onto desktop systems.
Sun Software executive vice president Rich Green said, “Innotek’s VirtualBox
would complement our recently announced Sun xVM Server platform, designed for
the datacentre.”
Innotek’s open source VirtualBox package allows desktops and laptops to run
Windows, Linux, Mac or Solaris OSes side-by-side and would compete with Citrix’s
XenDesktop software, Microsoft’s Virtual PC package and VMware’s Workstation
product.
“VirtualBox will align perfectly with Sun’s other developer focused assets
such as GlassFish, OpenSolaris, OpenJDK and soon MySQL as well as a wide range
of community open source projects, enabling developers to quickly develop, test
and deploy the next generation of applications," added Green.
Currently supported guest OSes on VirtualBox includes all versions Windows
2000, XP, Vista, Linux 2.2, 2.4 and 2.6 kernels, Solaris x86, OS/2, Netware and
DOS.
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