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January 21st, 2008

Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules

Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 8:35 am

Categories: Corporate strategy, Virtualization, Vista, Windows client

Tags: Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Corp., Virtualization, Storage Management, Utility Computing, Microsoft Windows Vista (Longhorn), Hardware, Storage, Operating Systems, Microsoft Windows

Microsoft has lifted its ban on enabling Windows Vista Home Basic and Home Premium in virtual machine environments.

The company announced on January 21 its decision to add the two new SKUs and planned to update its end-user license agreement to reflect the change.

(Microsoft was planning on making the announcement at 12:01 a.m. on January 22, but another publication broke the embargo, so the company is going out with the news early.)

Microsoft almost announced in June, 2007, that it was relaxing some of its virtualization rules for Windows Vista, in order to allow users of a wider number of Vista SKUs to make use of virtualization technology on the desktop. Then, in the eleventh hour, something happened — exactly what still remains unclear — and Microsoft ended up halting the planned virtualization changes.

For businesses, Microsoft is offering an annual subscription to what it’s calling the “Windows Vista Enterprise Centralized Desktop” for $23 per desktop for clients covered by Software Assurance. This offering, which allows customers to run Vista virtually as a server, previously was priced at $78 per desktop, according to company officials.

Microsoft also announced it has acquired Calista Technologies, a San Jose, Calif.-based desktop-virtualization specialist, for an undisclosed amount. Here’s Microsoft’s description of what Calist’s software does:

“Calista software improves the user experience of 3-D and multimedia delivery for Microsoft multimedia applications, virtualized desktop deployments, and server-hosted virtualized desktops or applications using Windows Server Terminal Services. The addition of Calista technology to Microsoft’s virtualization portfolio will enable people to watch video and listen to audio, and will enable remote workers to receive a full-fidelity Windows desktop experience without the need for high-end desktop hardware. “

(”Application delivery” expert Brian Madden provided more details on Calista and how its technology could dovetail with Microsoft’s in a prescient post last November.)

Microsoft is planning to announce these virtualization changes at a two-day Virtualization Deployment Summit for about 300 of its customers, which kicks off on January 21.

Until today, Microsoft’s end-user license agreement stipulated that users could run only the Business and Ultimate versions of Vista in virtual machines from Microsoft and other vendors. Microsoft attributed the original Vista virtualization restrictions to potential security risks, claiming that “security researchers have shown hardware virtualization technology to be exploitable by malware” and claimed Vista required an advanced level of know-how to thwart such virtualization exploits.

Any thought on Microsoft’s client-side virtualization changes? More to come on this story as it unfolds….

More updates from Microsoft:

* Microsoft isn’t ready to talk specifics about how/when it plans to add the Calista technology to its products. But company officials are characterizing Calista’s technology as something Microsoft sees as a “platform technology” which it plans to make “as widely available as possible.” Perhaps we’ll see it folded into Windows 7 ….

* Why has Microsoft decided to add support for Home Basic and Home Premium now? Officials said on Monday that Microsoft is seeing “a maturity in the industry,” in terms of being able to trust “what’s under the virtual machine.” But it doesn’t hurt, either, that adding Home Basic and Home Premium will help users run older applications that software vendors are not updating to support Vista.

* While Microsoft did add its consumer Vista SKUs (Home Basic and Home Premium) to the list of products it will allow users to run in virtualized environments, the company is not allowing for the virtualized use of information-rights management, digital-rights management and BitLocker encryption. (These were among the other licensing changes Microsoft contemplated making last June and pulled at the last minute.)

Update to the updates (on January 22): Contrary to what I was told yesterday, Microsoft is now saying that it is not prohibiting the virtualized use of information-rights management, digital-rights management and BitLocker encryption. From a corporate spokesman: “The EULA (End User License Agreement) advises against using these technologies for security reasons, but does not prohibit their use.”

Mary Jo FoleyMary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 20 years. Don't miss a single post. Subscribe via Email or RSS. You can also follow Mary Jo on Twitter.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 99 Talkback(s)
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules
Vista the world's most abominable software that has corrupted every PC sexy lingerie and laptop just after they made XP workable is an outrage. I purchased a ne... (Read the rest)
Posted by: sexy costumes Posted on: 11/11/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
What I don't understand...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/21/08
Exactly...  croberts | 01/21/08
Hardware support  Michael Kelly | 01/21/08
re: Hardware support  Intellihence | 01/21/08
Erm.  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
"In a world without walls and fences, who needs windows and gates?"  tikigawd | 01/22/08
Doesn't work that way  cornpie | 01/23/08
Yes it sort of does work that way...mostly  cornpie | 02/05/09
Home premium is pretty powerful.  pcguy777 | 01/22/08
Dude, get the quote right  tikigawd | 01/22/08
 http://evandro.net/ | 01/22/08
Home premium is pretty powerful.  http://evandro.net/ | 01/22/08
Because they can.  TripleII | 01/21/08
Maybe  Mary Jo FoleyZDNet Moderator | 01/21/08
Thats kind of a stretch isn't it?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/21/08
why?  doh123 | 01/22/08
why run Vista dual boot, when you can run it virtualized  pcguy777 | 01/22/08
Why dual boot when you can virtualise?  grail@... | 01/22/08
This is joke is it not?  Jeremy W | 01/21/08
Exactly! It's so weird how Apple ...  quikboy | 01/21/08
I can not understand it myself  GuidingLight | 01/21/08
re: This is joke is it not?  M.R. Kennedy | 01/21/08
As Far as I can tell . . . .  JLHenry | 01/22/08
People that support both OSX and Vista  e.russell@... | 01/22/08
Yep  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
you have no clue  pcguy777 | 01/22/08
Spoken like a  notsofast | 01/22/08
Sadly...Not  aliciavil@... | 01/22/08
exactly right  doogald@... | 01/21/08
Hmm...  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
right.  doogald@... | 01/22/08
There are uses for it  voska1 | 01/21/08
Would you really  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/21/08
You bet I'd do it  voska1 | 01/22/08
What does Ultimate give you that Home Basic does not?  Michael Kelly | 01/22/08
it gives you a fax gthat xp has for free  robert.johnson | 01/23/08
sufing/email is what I would think of  jimmy-42 | 01/22/08
Wallets do speak, after all!  Ole Man | 01/21/08
You do know...  rtk | 01/21/08
We can not be living in the same universe  GuidingLight | 01/21/08
I quite agree!  Ole Man | 01/21/08
Shut up, Old Troll.  M.R. Kennedy | 01/21/08
Much better....  techboy_z | 01/21/08
Support and testing  Teran | 01/21/08
Should have been reply to No_Ax  Teran | 01/21/08
Maybe, but its a stretch to think  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/21/08
Just one more tool in the toolbox  Teran | 01/21/08
Not a stretch for compatibility testing  po8crg | 01/22/08
since you could run visual studio 05 or 08 on top of it ... YES  pcguy777 | 01/22/08
Message has been deleted.  ballmerclone2@... | 01/21/08
What, No Report On IE7 Being Forced On Everyone?  itanalyst | 01/21/08
This is real bad.  joe.smetona@... | 01/21/08
Your joking right?  rbj1_z | 01/22/08
Actually not joking.  joe.smetona@... | 01/22/08
I Was Always Taught To Shoot Burglars When They Broke Into My House  itanalyst | 01/22/08
hes not joking, just doesnt have a clue  pcguy777 | 01/22/08
Yep  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
Reply  joe.smetona@... | 01/22/08
IE7 & WMP 11 No Problem  bjblackmore | 01/22/08
More Info.  joe.smetona@... | 01/22/08
More Info.  Ole Man | 01/23/08
Because IE7 is better than IE6?  quikboy | 01/21/08
Microsoft was not able to provide any additional information Tuesday  Ole Man | 01/21/08
Much like people  GuidingLight | 01/21/08
What? Apple forcing me the Leopard route?  GuidingLight | 01/21/08
because...  doh123 | 01/22/08
re: What, No Report On IE7 Being Forced On Everyone?  M.R. Kennedy | 01/21/08
Loved your Vista, Xbox, Zune? WM?  Jeremy W | 01/21/08
The maifa doesn't do turkeys  quikboy | 01/21/08
Interestinglly enough,  GuidingLight | 01/21/08
Naaah . . .  JLHenry | 01/22/08
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules  digitalrao77471@... | 01/21/08
Virtual PC on Home SKUs?  cquirke | 01/22/08
What's stopping you from doing that now? (nt)  Michael Kelly | 01/22/08
Never mind  Michael Kelly | 01/22/08
...  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
I always like it when someone  alaniane@... | 01/22/08
At times there is no choice  xrxca | 01/25/08
who cares about the "i accept"-stuff anyway?  andreas.tanzer@... | 01/22/08
Making a molehill out of a mountain  Ole Man | 01/22/08
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules  Metawatch | 01/22/08
MS and Intuit cost me $300 and NOW they allow VPN  home electrical | 01/22/08
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules  pgm554 | 01/22/08
Well...  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
Thats MORE than Apples doing!!!!!  pcguy777 | 01/22/08
comparison  Narg | 01/22/08
HOW to Spot a Troll !!!!  pcguy777 | 01/22/08
It's simple...  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
It's simple...  Ole Man | 01/22/08
Hmm...  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
paying out the ass for a mac  Ole Man | 01/22/08
"apps" means Apple???  wookie68 | 01/22/08
Uh huh  Spiritusindomit@... | 01/22/08
Does Calista software provide 3D Environment like Linux ???  pawan@... | 01/22/08
Why only specific editions?  John Musbach | 01/23/08
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules  Jackie150 | 09/07/09
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules  lingerie wholesale | 10/13/09
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules  Charmingirl | 10/18/09
RE: Microsoft (finally) broadens Windows Vista virtualization rules  sexy costumes | 11/11/09

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