Khosla enters virtualization space; invests in Moka5
We've mentioned the company before (scroll down), when it was called SkyBlue, but now the company has left secrecy mode.
The Redwood City company is targeting the PC market, essentially letting PCs act as if they are running any operating system or configuration, which the company says can help with things like security. We mentioned the "virtualization" craze earlier (scroll down).
It is the latest company backed by Vinod Khosla, the respected venture capitalist who left big-name Kleiner Perkins to invest on his own, via his fund Khosla Ventures. The company has raised a little more than $3 million, mainly from Khosla.
According to the company's statement yesterday, it is a spin-off from Stanford University䴜s Computer Science Department, and is led by Monica Lam, Professor of Computer Science, who is taking a leave from Stanford for now. Lam's research group was the first to use machine virtualization to address the problems of managing and securing computer desktops, according to the company's statement yesterday.
The vision behind our moka5 "LivePC" technology is to allow enterprises and consumers to work on whatever operating system, with whatever applications, on whatever device they want in a completely maintained, up-to-date and secure environment (that's the part that makes it "live.")
moka5 will be releasing beta product within 90 days.
http://www.siliconbeat.com/cgi-bin/mt331/mt-tb.cgi/1381
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Very likely the next big thing in PC market.
Regards,
Nag @
Startups.in
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With VMWare player out for free and the ease at which you can get a VMWare virtual m/c configurations, I doubt this is going to be big.
Also there is this Open Source Virtualization platform called Xen which is eyeing the server and desktop market too.
Dunno why this will be the next big thing.
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VM ware is not the answer, VM ware does not get close solving the security issues these guys are trying to address using Virtualization/compiling technologies. try looking at "Determina" sort of inline /realtime memory leak tracking security SW.
RK
RK on May 18, 2006 2:47 PMComment link