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VSI BASIC for OpenVMS is the latest name for a dialect of the BASIC programming language created by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) and now owned by VMS Software Incorporated (VSI). It was originally developed as BASIC-PLUS in the 1970s for the RSTS-11 operating system on the PDP-11 minicomputer.
VMs can be disconnected from a GUI session and run in background [25] AVX, AVX-2, AES-NI, SSE 4.1/4.2 instructions (if supported by the host CPU) 6.0 Dec 18, 2018: Support for exporting virtual machines to Oracle Cloud; A file manager which allows to control the guest file system and copy files from/to it; VMSVGA GPU driver for Linux hosts
VM/PC 1.1 was based on VM/SP release 3. When IBM introduced the P/370 and P/390 processor cards, a PC could now run full VM systems, including VM/370, VM/SP, VM/XA, and VM/ESA (these cards were fully compatible with S/370 and S/390 mainframes, and could run any S/370 operating system from the 31-bit era, e.g., MVS/ESA, VSE/ESA).
VWS 4.5 running on top of VAX/VMS V5.5-2 DECwindows XUI window manager running on top of VAX/VMS V5.5-2 Over the years, VMS has gone through a number of different GUI toolkits and interfaces: The original graphical user interface for VMS was a proprietary windowing system known as the VMS Workstation Software (VWS), which was first released for ...
2.0.1 [19] 19 June 2000 2.0.2 [19] 1 August 2000 2.0.3 [19] 2 November 2000 Improved mouse performance; Added support for wheel mouse; Added support for installation of SVGA driver in a Windows Me guest machines; 2.0.4 [19] 21 May 2001 Added support of Red Hat Linux 7.1 and SUSE Linux 7.1; Increased default memory size of a Linux virtual ...
The VMS provides a single management interface allowing clients to access camera sources across all servers, making them appear to be a unified collection rather than isolated on multiple independent sources. This functionally may be reserved for the higher-end or more expensive VMS product options, and may not be available from a low-cost VMS.
HP releases Integrity Virtual Machines Version 2.0, which supports Windows Server 2003, CD and DVD burners, tape drives and VLAN. December 11, 2006 Virtual Iron releases Virtual Iron 3.1, a free bare-metal virtualization product for the enterprise server virtualization market. 2007
The DMTF subsequently released the OVF Specification V1.0.0 as a preliminary standard in September, 2008, and V1.1.0 in January, 2010. [2] In January 2013, DMTF released the second version of the standard, OVF 2.0 which applies to emerging cloud use cases and provides important developments from OVF 1.0 including improved network configuration ...