2. Why Interop ? 3. A Look at the Numbers 90% 67% 93% 80% % of enterprises running Windows % of enterprises running Windows + Linux % of Fortune 1000 using Active Directory % of enterprises using Microsoft Office 4. Separate networks Separate admins Separate tools Additional infrastructure costs Additional training costs Additional licensing costs Is This Your Organization ? 5. Bridging the Divide November 2, 2006
Delivering unprecedented customer value
9. Document format compatibility
11. Joint sales, marketing, support programs 12. Areas of Technical Collaboration between Microsoft and Novell Virtualization Support optimized hosting and management of Windows Server 2008 and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server on Hyper-V and Xen Standards-based Systems Management Adopt a common framework for solutions to enable management of mixed environments based on open standards and open source components Directory and Identity Interoperability Improve directory / identity federation using WS-* standards Document Format Compatibility Enhance interoperability for Open XML Format and ODF documents between Microsoft Office and OpenOffice.org Silverlight Plug-in for Linux, MoonlightDevelop open source implementation of Silverlight plug-in for Linux OS Accessibility InteroperabilityInterop between Windows and Linux accessibility UI 13. Virtualization Adoption Virtualization on mainframes only Virtualization goes mainstream
14. Decreased power consumption 15. Increased business continuity 1980 2007 Time CollabAgreement 16. Heterogeneous Virtualization Hyper-V Windows Server 2008 R2 Win Serv 2008 R2 Legacy Windows SUSE Linux Enterprise Linux ICs Xen SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Win Serv 2008 R2 Legacy Windows SUSE Linux Enterprise PV Drivers Novell and Microsoft are collaborating on drivers To make Linux a first Class guest on Hyper-V SLES 10 and SLES 11 are Microsoft SVVP validated platforms for hosting Windows virtual machines 17. Linux Integration Components Windows Server 2008 R2 Open sourcekernel drivers for specific synthetic devices foroptimal performance of Linux on Hyper-V Additional capabilities:
19. Graceful shutdown Hyper-V Improved Performance:
21. Linux guests on par with Windows guest Supported Distributions:
Schedule:
24. Release Summer 2010 25. Linux Management Pack Health and Performance Monitoring of WindowsServers Health and Performance Monitoring of WindowsServers Health and Performance Monitoring of WindowsServers Health and Performance Monitoring of WindowsServers Health and Performance Monitoring of Linux Servers,CPU, Disk, Network System Center Operations Manager 2007 Ops Manager 2007 R2 Update Cross Plat Ext. Linux Management Pack Health and Performance Monitoring of Linux Processes + Services: Samba, BIND/DNS, DHCP, LDAP, CUPS, Firewall, NFS 26. Monitoring Linux By Extending Microsoft Operations Manager 27. Seamless Integration 28. SUSE Computer Diagram 29. Identity Federation WS-Management WS-Federation WS-Security Standards basedThird-party friendly Increased admin productivity 30. Identity Federation Example 31. Identity Federation Example 32. Identity Federation Example 33. Identity Federation eDirectory Employees Active Directory Business Units Sun One Customers Active Directory SharePoint Novell Access Manager Microsoft SharePoint LDAP and Federated ID to Claims
Simplified Access to SharePoint Provides secure and simple way to federate identities from any LDAP directory into Microsoft AD-based web service (eg. SharePoint) 35. Document Format Interoperability Microsoft / Novell Collaboration Bi-directional open source translators for word processing, spreadsheets and presentations between OpenOffice.org and Microsoft Office OpenXML Format Open standard file format for office applications that can be freely implemented by multiple applications on multiple platforms used in the Microsoft Office 2007 system. OpenDocument Format ISO-standardized, XML-based file format specification for office applications maintained by the open source community, developed by the OASIS industry consortium and used in OpenOffice.org. 36.
37. Enables users to consume Silverlight content through a browser on a Linuxplatform 38. Enables developers to create Silverlight content on a Linux platform 39. Supports Firefox, Konqueror, Opera browsers 40. Moonlight 2.0 available today, Moonlight 3.0 Fall 2010 41. Download at http://www.go-mono.com/moonlight Moonlight Open source implementation of the Silverlight runtime 42.
43. Three year subscription to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server whichincludes
44. Subscription Management Tool (SMT) 45. 24x7 unlimited technical support 46. 1 or 4 hour response time 47. Red Hat Enterprise Linux support for up to 2 years forthe most current release of RHEL versions 3, 4, 5 48. Training for migration from other Linux platforms RedtoGreen SUSE Linux with Expanded Support 49. Extend the monitoring capability of System Center Operations Manager to Linux environments Federate multiple ID stores with ADFS to extend your SharePoint collaboration Virtualize SUSE Linux Enterprise on Hyper-V and Windows on Xen Document interoperability between Microsoft Officeand OpenOffice.org Creating a bridge between Windows and Linux accessibility View and use Silverlightand Windows Mediacontent on Linux 50.
52. New contributions to the WS-Management open source project. 53. Enhancements to the OpenPegasus Project's Common InformationModel Object Manager (CIMOM) and interoperable providers. 54. Open source identity selector (OSIS) for Linux providing similarfunctionality and compatibility with Windows CardSpace identityselector. 55. Add-ins to OpenOffice.org that support Open XML formatteddocuments, spreadsheets and presentations 56. Bridge between Windows and Linux accessibility projects for SUSEand other Linux distributions (Red Hat, Ubuntu). 57. Moonlight, an open source version of the Silverlight technology toenable a cross- platform, rich web-based experience on Linux. Benefits to the Community 58. 59. Unpublished Work of Novell, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This work is an unpublished work and contains confidential, proprietary, and trade secret information of Novell, Inc. Accessto this work is restricted to Novell employees who have a need to know to perform tasks within the scope of theirassignments.No part of this work may be practiced, performed, copied, distributed, revised, modified, translated, abridged,condensed, expanded, collected, or adapted without the prior written consent of Novell, Inc.Any use or exploitation of thiswork without authorization could subject the perpetrator to criminal and civil liability. General Disclaimer This document is not to be construed as a promise by any participating company to develop, deliver, or market a product.Itis not a commitment to deliver any material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon in making purchasingdecisions.Novell, Inc. makes no representations or warranties with respect to the contentsof this document, and specifically disclaims any express or implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particularpurpose.The development, release, and timing of features or functionality described for Novell products remains at the solediscretion of Novell.Further, Novell, Inc. reserves the right to revise this document and to make changes to its content, atany time, without obligation to notify any person or entity of such revisions or changes. All Novell marks referenced in thispresentation are trademarks or registered trademarks of Novell, Inc. in the United States and other countries.All third-partytrademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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