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Parallels, Inc. is a privately-held virtualization technology company with offices all around the world (USA, Germany, UK, France, Japan, China, Russia and Ukraine). Parallels US offices are in Seattle, WA and Washington, D.C.. The company currently has over 900 employees. Parallels is best known for its MacIntel-based product Parallels Desktop for Mac, introduced one day after the announcement of Apple Inc.'s Boot Camp. Parallels uses Intel Core's virtualization technology to allow the virtual machine direct access to the host computer's processor. Parallels also offers Parallels Workstation, a virtualization product for use on Microsoft Windows or Linux and is planning to release Parallels Server in 2008. Parallels' major competitor is VMware. Parallels, Inc. was an SWsoft company until January, 2008 [3], each company operated as a separate entity and maintained its own distinct branding. In December, 2007, Parallels' parent company SWsoft announced its plans to change its name to Parallels and ship both companies' products under the Parallels name.[4] The merger was formalized in January 2008. [5]
Company History
ProductsParallels software is based on a lightweight hypervisor architecture, which provides the guest operating system direct access to the computer's hardware. Each Parallels virtual machine functions like a real computer with its own processor, RAM, floppy and CD drives, and tools. Parallels released Parallels Workstation first and released Parallels Desktop for Mac second. When Parallels and SWsoft merged, Parallels rebranded much of SWsoft's products under the Parallels branding. Parallels then released Parallels Server for Mac. Parallels Desktop for MacFirst released June 25, 2006, Parallels Desktop for Mac enables users to run Windows simultaneously with Mac OS X on their iMac, Mac mini, MacBook, MacBook Pro, MacBook Air or Mac Pro. It requires Mac OS X "Tiger" 10.4.6 or higher as the primary operating system. Parallels Desktop for Mac is a hardware emulation virtualization software that uses a lightweight hypervisor to give the guest OS access to the computer's hardware by mapping the host computer’s hardware resources directly to the virtual machine’s resources. It directly competes with VMware Fusion, both being able to run on an x86 Intel-powered Mac. Parallels WorkstationFirst released December 8, 2005, Parallels Workstation enables users to create multiple, independent virtual machines on one PC. Workstation consists of a virtual machine suite for Intel x86-compatible computers (running Microsoft Windows or Linux), which allows the simultaneous creation and execution of multiple x86 virtual machines. Workstation supports hardware virtualization technologies such as Intel Virtualization Technology. Parallels Server for MacFirst release June 17, 2008, Parallels Server for Mac is a hypervisor-based server virtualization software that enables IT managers to run multiple Windows, Linux and Mac OS X Server operating systems on a single Mac Xserve[17]. As of its release, it is currently the only server virtualization solution for the Mac OS X server platform and that allows users to virtualize Mac OS X Leopard Server. Parallels Virtuozzo ContainersParallels Virtuozzo Containers was first released under Parallels' former parent company SWsoft. The Linux version was released in 2001 while the Windows version was released in 2005. Parallels Virtuozzo Containers is an operating system-level virtualization product designed for large-scale homegenous server environments and data centers. Parallels Virtuozzo Containers is compatible with x86, x86-64 and IA-64 platforms. See also
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