Jeff Gould
October 21, 2008

Microsoft embraces AMQP open middleware standard

The surprising word out of Redmond is that Microsoft is about to make a small but remarkable overture toward the open standards world. They are about to embrace a very interesting though relatively little known enterprise messaging standard known as the Advanced Message Queuing Protocol, or AMQP for short.

What is AMQP, and why should anybody care whether Microsoft adopts it? Suffice it is to say that AMQP is to high-value, reliable business messaging what SMTP is to e-mail. The proprietary message oriented middleware (MOM) products on the market today like IBM’s MQ or Tibco’s Rendezvous fulfill the same function as AMQP. But they operate exclusively in single-vendor fashion and utterly fail to interoperate with each other.

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Thursday
25Oct

XenSource: Xen hypervisor made for servers, not OS

By Paula Rooney (ZDNet Blogs)
In spite of its close partnership with Microsoft, Red Hat and Novell, XenSource’s CTO maintains the virtualization hypervisor belongs in server hardware — not in the operating system.
Speaking at Interop in New York, XenSource CTO Simon Crosby said the slim, trim Xen hypervisor in products such as the company’s newly launched XenCenter OEM Edition is a more natural fit in hardware than in infrastructure software.

http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source/?p=1592


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