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Virtual Box is now free

Virtualization (the ability to run multiple OS simultaneously) is gaining lot of traction nowadays. In the PC world this started initially with VMWare and Virtual PC (which Microsoft acquired from Connectix) for development and testing purposes soon gained popularity in the servers. In servers virtualization is used to consolidate servers and applications into fewer servers and also used for running legacy OS and applications.

Screenshot showing Sun's Free Virtual Box running Vista as guest in a Linux Host

Today the entry barrier is greatly removed for Virtualization software with many of them available free (as in free beer), following is a partial list of them.

  1. Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 for desktops
  2. Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 for servers
  3. VMWare Player for desktops
  4. VMWare Server for servers

Recently few more has joined the list, they are:

  1. VMWare ESXi – A hypervisor that allows you to run production applications at near-native performance is now free
  2. Sun Microsystems’ Virtual Box – A popular desktop virtualization software that Sun Microsystems recently acquired from Innotek and turned into an Open Source GPL software
  3. Microsoft recently released its Server class production ready Hypervisor product called Hyper-V that is going to be part of Windows Server 2008 for a nominal fee of $28.

Cold Steel – Lakshmi Mittal

ColdSteel-Lakshmi-Mittal Two weeks back on my way back to Chennai in Mumbai Airport I picked up this book – Cold Steel “Lakshmi Mittal and the Multi-Billion-Dollar Battle for a Global Empire” by Tim Bouquet and Byron Ousey. The book is about the story of the world’s biggest and most hard-fought industry takeover of recent years. It is the story of Lakshmi Mittal taking over (or merging) with European steel giant Arcelor to form ArcelorMittal.  What I liked about the book was that it is told in a thriller fashion on what happened each day of this six month battle. Each day is being narrated by the authors in a scene by scene fashion including dialogs spoken. Once you start reading the book you can’t keep it down.

I always admired Mr.Mittal for his humble beginnings to become the “King of Steel” and for his vision which he followed to grow his company at unprecedented rates. His growth story is something that is made of numerous acquisitions of assets around the world which have all been successfully integrated. My admiration keeps growing as I read more – all his ventures have been outside his home country (India) in all far off places of the world and he still proudly sports an Indian Passport.  This book goes into detail of all the things (Politics and Racism) that happened behind closed doors to prevent him from taking over Arcelor. As the book says it – Mr.Mittal certainly is someone who is “Stoic” – a term meaning someone who just puts up with whatever is thrown at them. It is a very apt term to summarize what Mr.Mittal had to put up with during this battle – right from Racist like comments to protective behaviour of several European governments and finally the unprecedented stone-walling by Arcelor board for every step of Mr.Mittal.

The takeaway for me as a Corporate head from the book was how the entire team at Mittal Steel worked together as a single team to triumph over the fragmented Arcelor team. Consider the fact that Mittal Steel team was not composed of one organization but it nearly a dozen entities from Investment bankers, lawyers, PR Agencies, to Mr.Aditya Mittal and Mr.Lakshmi Mittal himself. The whole battle is pure project management brilliance of how all of them were kept in sync, said the same story, were in the same page all the time. Add to that the fact they used modern communication tools (Email and Blackberries) for effective collaboration increased my interest on reading the book fully.

I highly recommend this book for any one wanting to survive in today’s globalized corporate world.