It is only available to 2008 64Bit OS as well.

 

Chris Nicholson

Lead, Infrastructure Sustainment

IT Infrastructure Delivery
SHAW ) Communications
(:  (403) 716-6527

Cell:(403) 470-9816
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* [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

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"There are 10 types of people in the world; those who understand binary,
and those who don't"

 

From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 02, 2008 10:16 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Microsoft Hyper-V

 

Hyper-V is only available on Windows Server 2008, so I suppose you could
say "it is new to Windows 2008"

 

Hyper-V is just a role, like any other role (AD, Web Server etc), so can
be installed on any SKU that supports that role (including WS2008
Standard Core, WS2008 Enterprise Core)

 

Cheers

Ken

 

From: Anthony [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, 2 April 2008 8:55 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Microsoft Hyper-V

 

I've not seen an install of Server Core before.  Is this new to Windows
2008 or part of the Hyper-V install?

 

Ken, can you email me your presentation?  Sounds like a good
introduction.

 

Anthony

        ----- Original Message ----- 

        From: Steve Ens <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  

        Sent: Tuesday, April 01, 2008 8:57 AM

        Subject: Re: Microsoft Hyper-V

         

        However when considering patching a Core vs full OS install of
the host OS, the core will probably have to be rebooted far less.

        On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 9:47 AM, Ken Schaefer
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

        To be honest, in my experience you might get a few hundred MB of
RAM back by running Core rather than a full install. Unless you have a
few VM hosts, it's not worth worrying about either way.

         

        Performance is good - very good compared to Virtual Server 2005

        However there are a few drawbacks:

        -          No real management tools yet (SCVMM vNext is required
for managing Hyper-v)

        -          A few bugs (e.g. with TCP Offload and the new NICs)

        -          No ability to build VMs using PXE booting and using
the new synthetic NICs ( you need to use a legacy NIC)

         

        If you want a drill-down into Hyper-V architecture, I did a
presentation for my local user group on it that I can send to you
direct.

         

        Cheers

        Ken

 

 

 

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