hi sunny you are doing a good job but in this video, I think you forget that you are talking about type 2 at 3:24 and giving the example of type 1, if I am not wrong Parallels Desktop for Mac, QEMU, VirtualBox, VMware Player, and VMware are examples of type 2 hypervisor. so for that, I comment here
in this new environment l found myself, you have been of great help for and love for this profession grows everyday. I can not wait to learn more from you. Thank you so much
This was very informative. I would like to point out that there seems to be a mistake in the examples given for Type 1 and Type 2 hypervisor softwares. When presenting examples in the type 2 section, the examples he gives are listed at "type 1". I believe he meant that they are type 2 as this is the type 2 section and he already gave examapltes of type 1 software in the previous type 1 section of the video
nice tutorial about virtualization! this helps me right now with handling backup solution for data centers. i hope to see you discuss about it in the future. cheers!
Sunny I've watched several of your videos and I want to say I've enjoyed each one. You do an excellent job of presenting these concepts and I want to say thank you for making these videos! I would like to make one suggestion, I think it would take your videos to the next level if you would take some training to make your accent not so heavy, it would go a long way in helping to understand you. Anyways I wanted to say thank you, I'm subscribed to your channel and I'll look forward to your future content!
At 1:56, "A virtual machine can be configured to use not only a different OS, but also a different type of CPU, storage drive, or NIC than its host." How is it possible to use different type or CPU, storage drive or NIC? Do we have to provide them externally somehow?
For anyone who is asking why would a virtual machine be good for you I'll tell you this. I have a Windows 10 machine with a VM with Windows 10 on top of it. I work in the VM and makes backup copies of it periodically (pretty much every day) so if during the course of my experimenting I fowl something up I can just go back to the backup of the VM and copy it back to the computer using the based Windows 10 install and then go back to the VM and lose very little progress. I avoid having to reinstall all the apps and configuration because the backup is a complete restoration of the VM. It's saved my goose more than once when an upgrade to an app or OS had unexpected results.
Docker and Kubernetes are containers, not virtual machines (VMs). Containers run as an application and isolate the resources of the container from other containers. Containers are more "lightweight" than VMs.
@@JohnSmith-fo2or You are quite right. It is not very clear in its classification. It is a Kernel-based Virtual Machine hypervisor, which can be in both categories.
Thanks for uploading such latest and greatest technology.....expect from you a lot more like Cloud, IoT, big data, cyber security and many more..... I am afraid that KVM should be a Type 2 hypervisor as it gets installed on centos and RHEL Linux.....please correct me if I am wrong...