San Jose Mercury News: VMworld moves into the mainstream
"You’re virtually there," punned a sign by the escalator. A company offered bumper stickers: "I brake for virtualization."
Such are the gimmicks at VMworld, a three-day conference that opened
Tuesday at San Francisco’s Moscone Convention Center. Think of it as
the Burning Man of "virtualization," an esoteric software field that
has rapidly bloomed into a full-fledged industry, involving both
powerhouse companies like Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard and Intel as well
as a fresh crop of start-ups.
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"Diane Greene had a great
vision. She has proven that virtualization is bigger than anyone ever
thought it could be," said Vinod Khosla, a prominent Silicon Valley
venture capitalist and co-founder of Sun Microsystems Inc. He is
investing in a startup, Xsigo, that specializes in virtualization
hardware.Greene, 52, told Tuesday’s audience she sometimes finds it hard to believe how quickly virtualization is gathering steam.
"A year ago, we were talking about virtualization becoming
mainstream," she said. "Now, we are talking about a virtualization
industry."VMware’s future looks so bright that some analysts believe
the company someday could become as essential to the computing world as
Microsoft is.
KNTV-TV CH 11 (NBC) San Francisco: Diane Greene, VMWare, talks about their Swiss Army Knife software. (Video available for the next 21 days)