It's more like having your local PC or laptop on the cloud. You can spin up your virtual servers or virtual machines on the cloud, eliminating the need to purchase physical hardware. You still need a laptop to access the virtual server, but the virtual server on the cloud isn’t tied to a specific brand like a local PC. Cloud services are not platform-dependent, so you can deploy various versions of Windows, such as Windows 2016, 2019, and the latest versions, within a few minutes. In contrast, deploying these operating systems locally might require a dedicated network. They can be up and running on the cloud in a few minutes.
I use the solution in my company depending on our client's problems. My company has used Visual Studio Code based Modeler along with Microsoft Virtual Server. In my company, we have been using Microsoft SQL Server on virtual machines to help us decide if we want to use the tool as a PaaS solution offering or if we want to use it as an offering meant for virtual machines. Microsoft SQL Server on a virtual machine is known as Microsoft Virtual Server.
In our operations, Microsoft Virtual Server is crucial for managing virtual machines in testing and development. We utilize cloud databases in the Amazon Partner Network for efficient data handling, integrating web servers, and web services. Third-party Internet services and the APN connector system enhance our connectivity, providing a robust network infrastructure.
Our use cases are normal. It's a virtual machine. We have virtual machines for our application servers, for many application servers. So we use it just to reduce the cost of having new physical machines. That is the main benefit of virtualization in a GUI.
It is a good solution. If a company must have 100 physical servers, it can virtualize all those servers using Virtual Server. From a hundred physical servers, they can come to four physical servers. We can reduce the consumption.
We use Microsoft Virtual Server to centralize and access all Active Directory and file servers. Additionally, we regulate the computers within the domain and manage user access to the systems. Microsoft Virtual Server can be deployed on-premises, in the cloud, or in a hybrid environment, depending on the specific business requirements of each organization.
Systems Analyst/Network Engineer at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Reseller
2021-03-15T01:49:56Z
Mar 15, 2021
The typical use base varies due to the fact that, with our client base, we're here, there, and everywhere across the board. It all depends on what direction they want us to go and that we go, or suggest to go. The only places that we would use a virtual server is in an instance of running an exchange. I have also looked at it for running our managed services server on as well.
We use this product for virtualizing all of our environment. We have between 80 and 85 apps that run our core services. We are an insurance company and we have a lot of internal apps.
The most cost-effective server virtualization technology is now available as a free download. Virtual Server is a key component of any server consolidation strategy. Increase hardware utilization and cut power costs while enabling your organization to rapidly configure and deploy new servers.
It's more like having your local PC or laptop on the cloud. You can spin up your virtual servers or virtual machines on the cloud, eliminating the need to purchase physical hardware. You still need a laptop to access the virtual server, but the virtual server on the cloud isn’t tied to a specific brand like a local PC. Cloud services are not platform-dependent, so you can deploy various versions of Windows, such as Windows 2016, 2019, and the latest versions, within a few minutes. In contrast, deploying these operating systems locally might require a dedicated network. They can be up and running on the cloud in a few minutes.
I use the solution for application virtualization. We have deployed the tool in multiple locations.
I use the solution in my company depending on our client's problems. My company has used Visual Studio Code based Modeler along with Microsoft Virtual Server. In my company, we have been using Microsoft SQL Server on virtual machines to help us decide if we want to use the tool as a PaaS solution offering or if we want to use it as an offering meant for virtual machines. Microsoft SQL Server on a virtual machine is known as Microsoft Virtual Server.
We use the product to host applications for a connection management solution.
The solution can be used for lowering hardware expenses.
In our operations, Microsoft Virtual Server is crucial for managing virtual machines in testing and development. We utilize cloud databases in the Amazon Partner Network for efficient data handling, integrating web servers, and web services. Third-party Internet services and the APN connector system enhance our connectivity, providing a robust network infrastructure.
I use the solution to deploy the server for different use cases.
We use Microsoft Virtual Server to monitor user behavior on virtual machines. We can view incident reports using it.
We use the solution for virtual machines.
Our use cases are normal. It's a virtual machine. We have virtual machines for our application servers, for many application servers. So we use it just to reduce the cost of having new physical machines. That is the main benefit of virtualization in a GUI.
It is a good solution. If a company must have 100 physical servers, it can virtualize all those servers using Virtual Server. From a hundred physical servers, they can come to four physical servers. We can reduce the consumption.
We use Microsoft Virtual Server to centralize and access all Active Directory and file servers. Additionally, we regulate the computers within the domain and manage user access to the systems. Microsoft Virtual Server can be deployed on-premises, in the cloud, or in a hybrid environment, depending on the specific business requirements of each organization.
The typical use base varies due to the fact that, with our client base, we're here, there, and everywhere across the board. It all depends on what direction they want us to go and that we go, or suggest to go. The only places that we would use a virtual server is in an instance of running an exchange. I have also looked at it for running our managed services server on as well.
We are an engineering firm, so we're using Microsoft Virtual Server for engineering, drafting, and administration.
We use this product for virtualizing all of our environment. We have between 80 and 85 apps that run our core services. We are an insurance company and we have a lot of internal apps.