Industry News Desk
Open Source VirtualBox Desktop Virtualization Available for All Major Operating Systems
Sun Microsystems Announces Agreement to Acquire innotek, Expanding Sun xVM Reach to the Developer
Mar. 5, 2008 04:15 PM
Sun Microsystems announced that it has entered into a stock
purchase agreement to acquire innotek, the provider of the open source
virtualization software called VirtualBox. By enabling developers to build,
test and run applications on multiple platforms, VirtualBox will extend the Sun
xVM platform onto the desktop and strengthen Sun’s leadership in the virtualization
market. This software is available for all major operating systems at www.virtualbox.org and www.openxvm.org.
With over four million downloads since January 2007,
innotek’s open source VirtualBox product has been established as one of the
leading developer desktop virtualization platforms. Now, as part of the Sun xVM
portfolio, VirtualBox will have the support of Sun’s global development
community, field resources and partners to make VirtualBox even more compelling
to developers and end users, driving greater adoption across a broad set of
communities. VirtualBox enables desktop or laptop PCs running the Windows,
Linux, Mac or Solaris operating systems to run multiple, different operating
systems side-by-side, switching between them with just a click of the mouse.
This allows software developers to build multi-tier or cross-platform
applications, or power-users to take advantage of applications that may not be
available for their base operating system of choice.
"VirtualBox provides Sun with the perfect complement to
our recently announced Sun xVM Server product" said Rich Green, executive
vice president, Sun Software. "Where Sun xVM Server is designed to enable
dynamic IT at the heart of the datacenter, VirtualBox is ideal for any laptop
or desktop environment and 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"
VirtualBox is open source, and can be freely downloaded
without the hassle of payment or frustrating license keys at virtualbox.org or
openxvm.org. The download is less than 20 megabytes and the software is easily
installed on any modern, x86 architecture laptop or desktop system running
Windows, Linux, Mac and Solaris operating systems, in just minutes. Supported
guest operating systems include all versions of Windows from 3.1 to Vista,
Linux 2.2, 2.4 and 2.6 kernels, Solaris x86, OS/2, Netware and DOS.
The Sun xVM family of products uniquely integrates
virtualization and management to help customers better manage both physical and
virtualized assets across heterogeneous environments. Previously announced
products in the Sun xVM line include Sun xVM Server and Sun xVM OpsCenter. Sun
xVM Server is a datacenter grade, bare-metal virtualization engine with
advanced features such as live VM migration and dynamic self-healing, and can
consolidate Windows, Linux and Solaris operating system instances. Sun xVM Ops Center
is a unified management infrastructure for both physical and virtual assets in
the datacenter. Sun has announced partnerships and endorsements for xVM with
Microsoft, RedHat, Intel, AMD, Symantec and Quest Software. More information
about Sun xVM solutions can be found at: http://www.sun.com/xvm.
The agreement to acquire innotek follows Sun’s announcement
on January 16 of a definitive agreement to acquire MySQL, the world’s most
popular open source database. These acquisitions reaffirm Sun as the largest
commercial open source contributor.
The stock purchase agreement to acquire innotek is subject
to customary closing conditions and is expected to be completed during the
third quarter of Sun’s 2008 fiscal year. The terms of the deal were not
disclosed as the transaction is not material to Sun’s earnings per share.
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