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February 20, 2003

Microsoft Buys Connectix

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Microsoft announced late Wednesday that it was buying the virtual machine assets of Connectix, which makes the excellent Virtual PC line of products. The company says that the Connectix technology will enable Microsoft to support a virtual machine (VM) solution by adding tools that will help customers consolidate server resources, reducing hardware capital expenditures and operating costs. Microsoft purchased both the server and client versions of Connectix's virtual machine technologies, which runs on Windows server and desktop OSes and on the Macintosh.

"Our customers told us they wanted a best-of-breed virtual machine solution that enables them to run their legacy Windows applications, even as they migrate to more modern operating system technology," says Bill Veghte, the corporate vice president of the Windows Server Group at Microsoft. "With this acquisition, we are committed to delivering this solution for our customers and providing the support they need both today and in the future."

Despite concerns from the Mac community that Microsoft's purchase of most of Connectix's assets means that the Mac version of Virtual PC was dead, Microsoft says this isn't the case at all, and the company intends to continue improving the product. "Adding Virtual PC to its product portfolio is yet another example of Microsoft's continued commitment to the Mac platform," said Ron Okamoto, vice president of Worldwide Developer Relations at Apple. "We're glad to see Virtual PC go into such good hands."

But the real reason Microsoft purchased the technology is Connectix Virtual Server, a beta product which will eventually help the company migrate customers off of the legacy Windows NT 4.0 system. By virtualizing multiple NT environments on a single server, Microsoft customers can continue supporting legacy applications and services in a cost-effective way, the company says. Microsoft will release a preview version of Virtual Server on April 15, with the final version expected by the end of the year.

End of Article



Reader Comments
NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!! Typical of MS... buy it's way into a successful market/product.

Anything MS gets their hands on usually ends up going downhill so we Mac users can kiss VPC goodbye.

MS's so-called commitment to keeping the Mac version healthy is a joke. Look what happened to FrontPage. It was the first usable and successful WYSIWYG HTML editor and Mac-only until MS bought it from Vermeer. FrontPage went thru one or two minor tweaks on the Mac side then was discontinued and became a Windows-only piece of junk. FP is the bane of knowledgeable web designers and I warn people not to use it any chance I get.

Internet Explorer is another app that has stagnated (though to be fair, the Windows version hasn't advanced much either :-) Office for OSX has it's strengths but is still known to have introduced the first "virus" problem to appear on OSX (thru macros).

Goodbye VirtualPC... a wonderful program that will be truly missed for those rare times we need to use a Windows-only app :-(

Joe Scozzaro February 21, 2003


The same goes for that old database product Fox Pro that was compeeting with MS Access.
Now it only lives in the backwaters as a not very much used MS product (I even think the development has stopped although it is still supported on PC:s by MS).

Dennis February 28, 2003


This just in: Microsoft disables use of Virtual PC for running any OS except for Microsoft OS.. BeOS, FreeBSD & OpenStep disk images worked fine in 5.0 (connectix) crash in bizarre ways in 6.0 (microsoft).. coincidence? their web page says other OS's are not officially supported.. I should say not.

Roy Lovejoy May 14, 2004


Sad to see it go, however I would have to reply to Dennis that MS Foxpro is still very much alive they just came out with version 9, it is however PC only as with OS8 mac dropped odbc connectivity.

I am of course a Foxpro programmer ;-)

Ed June 16, 2004


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