Oracle VM: Missing in Action
The
Oracle VM FAQ says it will be available for download today. It's not.
Oracle VM is free, and will be available for download starting Wednesday, Nov. 14, 2007, at oracle.com/virtualization. Both Linux and Windows guests are supported.
It's not on the
Oracle software downloads page, either.
[update: It later showed up sometime by late-afternoon. At least there was a download button. When I went to download it, it made me give a page of registration info, and then said it'd take up to two days to "process" my info in compliance with "U.S. Export Administration Regulations and applicable export laws." BTW, I'm American, downloading from the U.S. I've never had this happen before.]
Labels: download, Oracle, oracle vm, oracleworld, social software, vaporware, virtualization
By popular demand! Oracle announces deprecated virtualization product.

How much you want to bet that web-based Oracle VM management tool requires Java? I really want to be wrong about this, but I gotta play the odds. Less certain, but also likely: "works better in IE."
Not that I want Oracle VM, their new confusingly Xen-based, partially open source,
only-virtualization-environment they'll officially support Oracle on, to be really be good anyway. I actually laughed when I listened to
this keynote at Oracle OpenWorld today:
Virtualization is hot... people have been asking us... Oracle, what are you going to do with virtualization?
Yeah, kinda like how people keep asking, "Hey Coolio, when's your next album coming out?" Like how they do on opposite day!
Like all Xen-based stuff, Oracle VM will only support Windows guests if you have hardware virtualization.
Unlike most Xen-based stuff, they're only supporting RHEL3, RHEL4 and RHEL5 Linux, and the wildly popular Oracle Enterprise Linux (if there's any left!).
Labels: enterprise, enterprisey, javalasses, Oracle, virtualization, xen