+1 on what ASB is saying. Our server admins expend much more effort in
dealing with the storage side of virtualization than anything else. If you
are planning on moving in to any type of shared storage, use some of your
training budget to really learn how to manage that.

 

-Malcolm

 

From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 12:09
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Virtual Server Training?

 

Much of what you need to learn about virtualization is generic to the
technology in general and serve you well regardless of whether you go with
Citrix, VMWare or Microsoft for your virtualization needs.

 

Server virtualization introduces a lot more storage and networking
configuration, and if you don't currently have that experience, it is good
to understand so that you can architecture things properly.

 

Other than that, a virtual server behaves largely like a physical server in
99% of the scenarios you will care about.

 

Product specific virtualization information is good to get if you know which
one you're going to run with.

 

The cost of the training will depend on how much of it you need.  Usually
2-3 days (8-12 hours or so) of real time will do you good for starters.


-ASB: http://XeeSM.com/AndrewBaker



On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Stephen Wimberly <[email protected]>
wrote:

What training would you consider 'recommended' for a server admin
going into virtual servers for the first time?  We have used Microsoft
Virtual Server 2005 before, but did not care for the setup.  We are
currently looking at a recommendation from Dell which covers two
server host boxes, one storage box and one management switch.  I
currently manage about 20 physical servers, so what I would need would
be specific to the differences to virtual servers rather than physical
servers.  All I need to do is add a line item for "training costs" and
go for funding options!  How much do you think training for virtual
environments could be worth?

 

 

 

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