Flexible Hosting with vSphere

Flexible Hosting with vSphere

Hosting companies are famous for offering rock bottom deals—loads of space for next to nothing. But often, those “deals” come at a high price, requiring a cookie-cutter approach that doesn’t work for today’s high energy, fast-reaction time companies.

With VMware’s vSphere, virtual hosting companies can offer additional operating systems, more than any other hypervisor, and the opportunity to use the latest cloud computing concepts like chargeback applications and Open Virtualization Format vApp to make your environments as versatile as your company needs to be.

Operating System Choices and vSphere

By using vSphere as your virtualization platform, you get fewer restrictions on host and client operating systems. The latest VMware-supported operating systems include Asianux, Debian, CentOS, FreeBSD, OS/2 Warp, Windows 7, Open Enterprise Server, and Solaris 10, adding to others that have been supported by VMware for years, such as Ubuntu, Red Hat, SuSE and NetWare.

À la Carte Billing with Chargeback Applications

A true cloud computing platform, vSphere supports the use of chargeback applications. Using a chargeback, a customer can pay just for the processing power, RAM, storage space, and networking they consume. That means that as the customer, you can slice the pie a little bit thinner when it comes to operating expenses, adding to the capital expenditure savings realized through virtualization. And if you are hosting applications for your customers, you have a new way to evaluate, measure and charge your customers for exactly what they use—no more choked applications during a sudden spike or punitive after-the-fact billing. You and your customers can both see exactly how much was used and when, reducing billing hassles. Conversely, your customers will be pleased to be charged less when their demand goes down.

And chargeback can help allocate resources and promote visibility into the costs of doing business within your own company, as well, by showing who’s using virtualization resources.

Maintain Policies and Service Levels with vApp

Run your applications securely with vApp, which enables the control of multiple virtual machine interactions, and even virtual machine creation at your own site, using the industry-standard Open Virtualization Format. OVF specifies and encapsulates all components of a multi-tier application, maintaining operational policies and service levels across the application. In the same way that a UPC bar code signifies all the information about a product, vApp contains all the policy standards defined by application owners, which the cloud operating system can automatically interpret and execute.

More Operating Systems and True Cloud Computing with Infinitely Virtual

To learn more about how VMware and the vSphere platform can offer you OS flexibility, versatile policy management, and chargeback billing, call (866) 257-8455 or go to www.InfinitelyVirtual.com. Let us help you create a custom-fit virtual network.

Watch the video related to Gecko

this is my crested gecko he is a beast

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9 Responses to “Flexible Hosting with vSphere”

  1. surferdude says:

    Geckos for one have pads on their feet making them more able to climb on different surfaces like glass for example. the anole has claws, they can climb on many surfaces, say brick, but don't have the advantages of the sticky pads. Anoles also don't stay green they can turn brown to adapt to their surroundings unlike the gecko. The life span I'm not sure of, when I kept anoles as a child they never lasted longer than 6 months to a year, but maybe they just don't do well in captivity. they both run wild here in florida, but I've never tracked one to see how long it lived. I do think geckos live longer.

  2. *Unforgiven* says:

    well save ur money for a beardy cant go wrong with em

  3. attackgecko says:

    Well, it depends. Most geckos, like Leo's and Fat tail's, are "adult" when they are sexually mature. Females are sexually mature at age 6-10 months. Males are born mature, but they become adult when they are around a year or little less…

  4. jzucker12 says:

    http://www.thegeckospot.com/pictuscare.html

    This is my favorite gecko website! They reach maturity at 7-10 months or so. Check out this care sheet and see if your husbandry (how he is being cared for) is all correct. :)

  5. foshizzle says:

    I heat mine using a UTH (mini by zoo-med $20.00 at petco).

    Shouldn't have any trouble housing them together. You actually have to set the conditions just right for them to mate. They're not like mammals that get busy at the first sign of life in a potential mate.

    Just make sure you don't house two males together. They will fight and end up hurting or killing one another.

  6. Sampson I says:

    that is sad you want to kill it.
    leave the windows cracked a little and he will crawl out.
    don't kill it… it will eat lots of bugs and that is good

  7. saxplayer4@sbcglobal.net says:

    Whoa – twice a day would be too much.

    Make sure you're dusting them with gecko vitamin powder and gut loading them first. Then put about five in the tank and if he eats all of them, put a few more in. If you put too many in, they'll just annoy the gecko and will also die faster than they will in their own house w/ food and water.

    Every other day or every third day should be fine. We know when our leo is getting hungry when she hangs out below the hole we drop the crickets in.

    If you over feed, you'll know, b/c he won't go after the crickets.

  8. Sky says:

    Sounds like a perfect match for a crested gecko. Remember to do loads of research before purchasing any reptile! Heres a few links.

    forums.repashy.com

    pangeareptile.com

  9. ShootNhowl says:

    none, zero , zip, nada, dont do it !

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