Julia Austin's Blog

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I've been giving some thought about how VMware can play a part in supporting researchers and instructors during the current economic strain. Everybody's budgets are being cut and less and less funding is available from both government and industry. So, what can industrial partners to the academic community do to help? Cold hard cash is always good, but here are a few other ideas to think about:

- Free software licenses - VMware makes most of their software freely available to support research projects and classroom activities that depend on virtualization tools. Even the really pricey stuff is free if the project qualifies as a virtualization or related effort. It would be great if other industrial partners did the same.

- Discounted/used hardware - once and awhile, a not-so-old server, SAN or even network gear needs to come out of a data center somewhere. Industrial partners need to remember that many research and teaching labs would benefit from something that is only a year or so old. Make a match! Post something on govirtual.org's Grants and Funding Opportunities discussion group if you know of available equipment or know of someone in need of such equipment.

- Pro-bono support - many researchers and faculty are using software that was purchased via grant/gift money, but don't always have the high-end support packages necessary to help with set-up, configuration and on-going troubleshooting. Even a couple of hours of on-site or telephone support free of charge can be quite useful to a research team. Industrial partners should consider adding this type of work to their community service agenda in 2009.

These are just some of my ponderings. Please blog or add to the Grants and Funding Opportunities discussion group if you have other ideas.

Meanwhile, we will continue to explore how VMware's academic program (VMAP) will increase its support of research and education funding. Look for more details in early 2009.

Have a safe and happy holiday season!

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I just got back from the second annual VMAP workshop hosted at VMware's annual user conference, VMworld in Las Vegas. The user conference boasted over 14,000 attendees - which included our members, student posters and university representatives using virtualization to support complex and often diverse campus infrastructures. I think the VMAP workshop attendees would agree that the conference was "eye opening" to say the least! The countless number of vendors developing software solutions to leverage virtualization was staggering. Be on the lookout for VMAP member blogs talking about their experiences from the conference. We'll also send a link out to the poster abstracts and presentation materials in the next couple of weeks.

Meanwhile, a few thoughts of mine about this year's event...

The student posters got first-hand experience explaining their scientific approach to complex problems to industry participants at VMworld's opening reception on Monday night. I enjoyed listening to our rising stars in academia trying to distill complicated problems into a language that the non-scientific, yet technical, observers can understand. Several industry attendees at the conference told me that they were pleased to see students able to present their ideas in a way that allowed them to appreciate how hard some of these problems are to solve.

At this year's full-day workshop, we had faculty from Georgia Tech, Columbia University, Northeastern, PolyTechnic/NYU, Cambridge University, George Mason, and University of Toronto. Carnegie Mellon, MIT and Olin College of Engineering were also represented by our student posters. Industry researchers from VMware and AMD were also present.

After lunch, which included a closer look at the student posters, we had three terrific speakers. We invited each speaker based on their varied use of virtualization at their respective schools. Ada Gavrilovska of Georgia Institute of Technology discussed her work on managed virtualized platforms. This work began using Xen and is now using VMware's ESX source code as a proof of concept to validate performance statistics of power management techniques. Discussion after her talk highlighted the question of cloud vs. grid and how large clusters should be leveraged for research and computation.

Jeffrey Dwoskin of Princeton University, talked with the group about his use of virtualization to test his security architecture research. As Jeff explained, virtualization software resolves the need to reproduce hardware environments to test the architecture he is developing.

Jason Nieh of Columbia University came from a completely different perspective - using and teaching virtualization in computer science. Jason painted an interesting picture of how Columbia has increased enrollment in the operating systems course over the past nine years and as a result has produced several interesting research projects/papers from students much earlier than typical in their academic careers. He attributes virtualization as a means to get more hands on experience and appreciation for systems. Students are not bogged down with crashing machines when doing kernel hacking and they don't have to worry about complexities of different operating systems. Jason also talked about the success of Columbia's first virtualization course offered this past spring. A complete set of the materials from this course can be found in govirtual.org under courseware.

Overall, I'd have to say that I am quite pleased with how our second annual event turned out and I'll share some additional thoughts on discussions from the workshop in my next blog. Also, I want to extend a special thanks to Melissa Wood, VMAP Program Manager extraordinaire, for her tireless work pulling together the poster session and workshop. For those who didn't know, she also helped me coordinate the attendance and schedules of over 200 engineers from VMware for the VMworld conference. Hats off to you Mel!

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Welcome to govirtual.org!

Posted by Julia Austin Jul 11, 2008 Views:943

Welcome to the govirtual.org website!  We created this site to answer the call of many who want one place to go for materials, discussions, and information about virtualization for their research and teaching.  While the site was started by the academic team at VMware, we really want this to be a non-commercial, community member site that is totally platform-agnostic.  VMware is footing the bill for the site so community members don’t need to worry about advertising, spam or any other such nonsense.  Just pure content focused on the topics you teach and research.

One of the things I hear routinely from faculty members at universities all over the globe is that they don’t have content to teach virtualization topics in their courses.  On govirtual.org, we have started a collection of virtualization course content.  Whether it is to cover a lecture or two in your operating systems course or perhaps you want to offer an entire semester on the topic – it’s in there.  We have also included the start of a recommended paper list, homework assignments and even an exam.  We know of a lot of faculty out there that use virtualization for their courses.  Security and operating systems courses are most common because of the isolation and ease of use of VMs.  Posting courses that use virtualization are just as cool as those about virtualization.  Please add your courses to this site or point it to colleagues that may have content to offer.

Another common complaint heard across the academic community is that there is no one place to find details on systems/virtualization conferences.  Govirtual.org has just the spot for this information – including valuable submission and registration date information.  Know of conferences that should be listed on the site?  Please fill out the form and let us know the details!

There are a lot of cool tools out there that support research on virtualization or that leverage virtualization.  DynamoRio is one of my favorites and VMware has decided to release it to the academic community a free download on govirtual.   Please share similar tools with the community.  You can either host them on govirtual.org or link them to the site of your choice.  Share!

We’re also hoping that folks will take advantage of the blog and discussion group feature on the site.  The site is powered by Clearspace which makes these features easy to implement and use. 

Finally, the member profile part of the site is a good way to network and get to know the community.   It’s an ideal way to find folks to collaborate with, look for internships or post-docs, or even jobs.

We are excited about the launch of govirtual.org and we are eager to see the content grow for everyone’s benefit.   VMware staff will do their best to keep the site rich, clean of promotional materials, and useful to the community, but it will be the community that will make the site a success.  Tell your students and your colleagues to check it out!

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