Microsoft purchases virtualization management company Kidaro

Posted by Gabe Knuth on March 12, 2008. send this link to your friendsprint this post
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From an article on CNET :

In its latest move into virtualization, Microsoft said on Wednesday that it has bought Kidaro, a company that helps businesses manage their collection of virtual machines.

Microsoft said the technology will make it easier for businesses to manage application compatibility challenges, ultimately spurring faster Vista adoption as well as broadening the use of virtual machines within corporations.

"The challenge we have with Virtual PC today is it doesn't have enterprise-level management and deployment with it and the user experience could be improved," said Gavriella Schuster, a senior director in Microsoft's Windows unit. Schuster said that Kidaro's technology helps on both scores. In addition to tools for setting up and managing virtual machines, Kidaro has technology that makes virtual machines less jarring for users, making them appear to be part of the standard desktop. (Parallels has a similar feature in its Windows-on-Mac virtualization product)

Kidaro's technology will be added to a future version of the company's awkwardly named Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack. The collection of tools is sold as an add-on to Microsoft's Software Assurance program for volume license customers. Other things in the collection include an application virtualization technology known as SoftGrid and asset management tools that stem from Microsoft's AssetMetrix acquisition.

Schuster said that Microsoft won't know exactly how long it will take to add in Kidaro's product to MDOP until it has a look at the code. "We hope that it's certainly less than a year," she said, adding that Microsoft aims to have a more concrete time frame by its Management Summit next month.

While perhaps not a mainstream way for businesses to move to Vista, Schuster said Microsoft thinks some companies will find it more palatable with Kidaro's tools to run older, Vista incompatible applications via a Windows XP virtual machine.

"We do see that as a pretty significant option for a lot of our customers," she said.


I assume that this is for applications that cannot be sequenced or packaged by the SoftGrid component of the Desktop Optimization pack. If that's the case, I can think of a few places that could use this technology.  Still, I wonder what the purchase price was, because this seems to me like something Microsoft could have easily made in-house.  Maybe it was a steal.

The real question is this: Will it help your company choose to migrate to Vista any sooner than it has to?  

Probably not.

Is anyone's company 100% (or 90%, or 80%) Vista yet?  I switched to Mac just so I didn't have to run Vista.  You could say our company is 50% OS X right now!
Reader Comments
WHat is KIdaro
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 4:09:08 PM

Guest
Brian, any way you could tell us more about Kidaro? what exactly is this product?
Re: WHat is KIdaro
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 4:21:56 PM
Yeah.. this article was written by Gabe, since this news broke when I was in class today. So thanks Gabe for the quick bit! I'm familiar with Kidaro and will write a more in-depth piece tonight.
ACE Killer
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 4:40:39 PM

Guest

Real question is how much will MS slow them down. They had a really good policy mgmt engine that ACE lacked. Guess it's curtains for MAC support for Kidaro, unless parallels becomes a play.

For those who don't know, Kidaro is what ACE is trying to be for Enterprises.

Re: ACE Killer
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 5:05:12 PM

Guest
Is KIdaro a VDI product like xen desktop and VMW VDM??
Re: ACE Killer
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 8:22:59 PM

Guest
no its client hosted desktop virtualization.  So no infrastructure build out needed behind the fw.  The corporate workspace (OS, data, tools, vpn) are all put into a virtual wrapper, encrypted, and then run on a std virtual engine (either VPC or VMWare player) and delivered to end points via USB, DVD or web.  great for mobile workforces, home users, contractors, offshore.  Any 3rd party UNmanaged PC that creates a managment nightmare and TCO.  cool stuff.
Re: ACE Killer
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 9:16:36 PM

Guest
You mean it's disconnected?
It was in the 100M range.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 9:58:08 PM

Guest

Great buy for MS but $$$