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Jan. 3, 2010
In an effort to openly collaborate with industry partners in driving the future of server virtualization, Linux
vendor Red Hat has decided to open sourc its SPICE (Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environment) hosted
virtual desktop protocol.
Overall, Spice is a core component of the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization for Servers and Desktops product
that is currently in beta. Through the Spice project, Red Hat will collaborate with its partners and the open
source community to expand the development of the protocol in an effort to help break down barriers to server
virtualization adoption across the IT industry.
Brian Stevens, v.p. of engineering at Red Hat says "by open sourcing this Linux technology, we are allowing our
industry partners and the IT community to broadly contribute to the future of virtualization with us. The SPICE
protocol is designed to optimize performance by automatically adapting to the graphics and communications
environment that it is running in, so that Linux vendors have a good opportunity to enhance it for their own
specific applications."
"Open sourcing technologies is at the heart of Red Hat's development and business model, and we hope that the
ecosystem around desktop virtualization will now grow more rapidly and deliver more innovation to customers
sooner," added Stevens.
Jay Lyman, enterprise software analyst with The 451 Group says "while open source acquired technologies is only
logical for Red Hat, the company is backing its release of the SPICE protocol source code as open source with
supporting implementation code and components for server and client deployment. We're still very early on in the
adoption of virtual desktop technology and standards, but an open source SPICE has real potential to build developer
and ecosystem support and to serve as a common layer among different VDI options."
A component of Red Hat's September 2008 acquisition of Qumranet, SPICE is an adaptive remote rendering
protocol designed specifically for virtual environments. With its modern, high-performance communications technology,
SPICE aims to provide a seamless user experience for today's bandwidth-intensive applications such as multi-media
and VoIP, offering a user experience comparable to that of a physical desktop.
Overall, SPICE is one of three main technology components included in Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization for
Desktops, a solution set currently in a private beta with general availability expected in April of this year.
Daniel Frye, vice president, Open Systems Development at IBM says "Red Hat's delivery of the open source SPICE
protocol is an important step toward the goal of interoperability for the industry's heterogeneous virtualization
solutions. We look forward to working with Red Hat and the Linux and open source community to drive virtualization
adoption forward."
Joe Makoid, president of Devon IT says "our company is at the forefront of delivering multimedia through thin
client solutions and is a strong supporter of the SPICE protocol using our thin clients. Open sourcing paves the
way for an industry standard upon which Devon IT can help customers build valuable solutions. We are pleased to
offer our leadership to help enable open source and Linux solutions that integrate into customers' existing IT
environments."
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Source: Red Hat.
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