I am a huge fan of the website run-virtual.com, on November the 16th 2006 Richard Garsthagen yelled Yippie!! in one of his posts and that was for a reason. Richard was able to talk to VirtualCenter via SOAP with his own Visual Basic application. On November the 21th he published his first application with the name VmotionInfo. That was the eye opener for me. I immediately visited the vmware.com website to get my hands on as much SDK info as possible. Unfortunately the VB example folder was empty. During the next months I was struggling with C# and Googeling like crazy but my VB application could not communicate with VirtualCenter. In the beginning of April 2007 I attended the TSX in Nice and got up early to visit the VI3 Perl SDK lab hosted by Jeremy van Doorn. Afterwards I interviewed Jeremy and asked him if VMware is going to release the SDK examples for Visual Basic. His answer was that it will be released this year ? This year I thought? I want to start writing my apps right now. This week I had a breakthrough. I only slept for a few hours last night but it paid off. My Visual Basic application is communicating with Virtual Center and “logging on? takes an eye blink. Yippie!!! I only have till Friday to work on my first app because after next weekend I am delivering the VI3 Install and Configure training in The Hague and Eindhoven. So I have decided that I am going to share my invention. I am going to write a complete “how to? and will publish all the source code and VB project files on my website www.ntpro.nl. Stay tuned.
Tuesday, April 24. 2007
Yippie!!
Friday, April 20. 2007
VMware symposium Antwerp
Today, virtualization is in the forefront - helping businesses with scalability, security and management of their IT infrastructure. VMware is pleased to invite you to join them on Tuesday 12 June at VMware Symposia 2007, an exclusive one-day event designed to stimulate the exchange of viewpoints and strategies among industry experts and leaders who are harnessing the power of virtualization. You can find more info on the VMware Symposia website.
Location : FCCC - Elisabethzaal, Koningin Astridplein 26, 2018 Antwerpen, Belgium
Wednesday, April 18. 2007
Great VMware SSH Terminal and File Transfer Client
Solko brought me up to date with another great tip. When you are tired of all the error message’s Winscp is giving you and you want to integrate SSH and all the other functions you are using to communicate with you VMware ESX server in just one program, you may want to take a look at a great tool with the name Tunnelier. This tool is a friendly and flexible SSH client for Windows which includes state of the art terminal emulation, graphical as well as command-line SFTP support, an FTP-to-SFTP bridge, powerful tunneling features including dynamic port forwarding through integrated proxy, and also remote administration for our SSH server, WinSSHD. Tunnelier is free for individual use and you can get it here.
Royal TS: Easy Remote Desktop Connections
This week I am delivering the VMware course VI-3 install and configure to twelve enthusiastic people. One of them told that he is using a very handy (and free :-)) tool that can be used to manage multiple remote desktop connections. Royal TS allows you to organize and manage multiple remote desktop connections. Connect to any machine where terminal services are enabled. Organize connections in custom categories for quick access. Connect directly to the console session and find out who else is connected to the machine. You can get a free copy here. Thanks to Solko.
Wednesday, April 11. 2007
nLite - Windows Installation Customizer
Last week at the TSX in Nice I had an interview with Richard Gartsthagen. He was very enthusiastic about at tool called nLite. With this tool you can remove Windows components like the Media Player, Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, MSN Messenger and more….. When your are creating a template for your virtual machines, you don’t want a modem driver or a sound card driver. In fact the only drivers you are using within a virtual machine are the one’s within the VMwaretools. After the removal of all the overhead from your Windows ISO the virtual machine becomes very small and Windows will start faster than ever before. Its even possible to slipstream the virtual machine drivers into you ISO and get rid of the press F6 message for the LSI driver during the setup of your Windows XP virtual machine. Richard has build an ISO image for the VDI labs with a size of 72 Mb. After the ISO is installed you have a Windows XP virtual machine witch starts up in seconds and the size of the hard disk is only 500 Mb with still 200 Mb free disk space. This is the first step in creating a JeOS (pronounced "Juice") witch is an abbreviation of Just Enough Operating System. This technique lets you create and ship your software within are ready to run virtual machine. You can get a free copy of nLite at http://www.nliteos.com/.
Thursday, April 5. 2007
At the airport
Today I recorded the last two interviews, actually Viktor van den Berg interviewed me :-) , and I had an interview with Bouke Groenescheij. Bouke started his training and consulting company called Jumé recently. Jumé stands for commitment, professionalism and flexibility - new way of thinking. Jumé provides the best possible service, technical knowledge, enthusiasm during training and consultancy. That way you will get the best and honest solution, guaranteed!
I want to thank all the people at the TSX for this great event.
Wednesday, April 4. 2007
TSX movie
During the TSX days in Nice I have created some small movies with my Sony DVD92E and recoded the VOB files with Nero Recode. After the recoding I edited the MP4 files with Windows Movie maker 6 and placed the movies on YouTube. When you are interested in the opening speech from Richard Garthagen or you just want to get an impression about the TSX in Nice please visit the following address.
TSX Interview with Jeremy van Doorn
Just after the SDK Programming Perl toolkit lab I had the opportunity to conduct an interview with Jeremy van Doorn. He works for VMware since 2004 as a Senior Systems Engineer. His work is to present VMware solutions to customers and speak on seminars. Besides that he talks, on a daily basis with the costumers about where they can use the VMware products. In the past Jeremy was a security engineer at BT (Syntergra) where he had an advising role regarding secure WAN links. The photo is taken by Viktor van den Berg, on his website you can find more TSX photo's.
TSX interview with Scott Herold
I had an interview with Scott Herold he told me that there are many challenges that exist in implementing a Virtual Infrastructure that fall across various levels of an organization. Find out from Scott Herold, one of the leading industry experts, how these challenges can be overcome and how you can be successful from both a technical and business perspective in your Virtual Infrastructure deployment Scott Herold is a VMware Authorized Consultant (VAC), a VMware Certified Professional (VCP), and the owner of www.vmguru.com, a leading virtualization forum. Herold has engineered and implemented some of the largest ESX Server solutions in the world, including those for several financial services and insurance companies. His solutions designs range from two to three physical server implementations to enterprise environments of more than 50 eight-way hosts. Herold is one of the most active participants in the VMware Technology Network Forums, an acknowledge expert in the virtualization field and recognized author of VMware ESX Server, Advanced Technical Guide. The photo is taken by Viktor van den Berg, on his website you can find more TSX photo's.
Tuesday, April 3. 2007
TSX opening
The first official day at the TSX in Nice was a busy day. You had to find the most interesting session before the room filled up and your had to get your drinks in time ;-). Besides that I got the opportunity to interview a lot of interesting people. The opening speech went great and I made a little video of the presentation from Richard Garthagen. Tomorrow I am going to take the Perl lab. I will keep you posted. The photo is taken by Viktor van den Berg, on his website you can find more TSX photo's.