Virtualization News Desk
Neocleus Redefines Endpoint Management and Security with a Virtualization Platform
Extends Xen Server Hypervisor to Endpoints Such as Desktops and Laptops and Fosters Ecosystem of Innovation via Open Source
May. 9, 2008 01:30 PM
Digg This!
Neocleus announced that it has completed more than 18 months
of work to enhance the Xen hypervisor to work on endpoints such as desktops and
laptops. Neocleus will contribute these enhancements to the open source
community to accelerate the adoption and development of a new generation of
enterprise endpoint solutions.
To create the hypervisor, Neocleus enhanced the Xen
Open Source server-oriented hypervisor and transformed it into an
endpoint-oriented hypervisor. Whereby current hypervisors provide distinct
benefits for server consolidation and desktop virtualization specifically
within the data center, Neocleus has enhanced and modified the Xen code to address
endpoint requirements. These include the need for a graphical interface, a
diversity of connectivity and compatibility options, easy installation
processes, security and performance specifically for the end user.
“Current desktop and laptop virtualization solutions rely on
an underlying or “host” operating environment to operate. As such, these
solutions are susceptible to the same limitations and pitfalls that befall the
host operating environment and do not really address both end-user and IT needs,”
said Etay Bogner, co-founder and CTO, Neocleus. “The Neocleus enhancements
deliver a Type 1 hypervisor that works natively on the “bare metal” providing a
virtualization solution that truly takes into account the needs of both IT and
end users. Our approach empowers organizations to operate trusted virtual
environments outside of and side by side with an underlying operating
environment such as Windows, resulting in distinct performance, security and
control benefits that were previously unattainable.”
Neocleus augments the hypervisor with a framework that
includes the necessary application programming interfaces (APIs) to meet
compatibility, usability, performance and scalability requirements. The APIs
define how system resources can be allocated to separate virtual environments
so that specific IT tasks can operate outside of Windows. This framework
defines programming requirements in such a way that overall application
performance is not impacted, the end-user experience is not hindered, endpoint
IT control is increased and security concerns are addressed. The company will
contribute this code to the open source community to allow software developers
to enhance it as well as focus on building high-performance applications
without having to worry about the underlying architecture.
“It is clearly in the best interest of the industry to
collaborate and accelerate the delivery of a single uniform endpoint hypervisor
that satisfies the many endpoint use cases that all types of organizations
employ,” said Ariel Gorfung, co-founder and CEO, Neocleus. “Our contribution of
an endpoint-oriented hypervisor and framework to the open source community will
allow the community to further extend the value of virtualization across the
distributed enterprise. “
About Virtualization News DeskSYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.