Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 Arrive Feb. 16
        
        
        
        		Microsoft Wednesday released Service Pack 1 for Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 to its equipment manufacturing partners.
SP1 has essentially hit the "RTM" milestone, in Microsoft's  parlance, which is the time when hardware manufacturers start creating images  of the software for their server products. The service pack will be available  to Microsoft's TechNet and MSDN subscribers, as well as to Microsoft volume  licensing customers,  Feb. 16, 2011. It will be generally available via the  Microsoft Download Center and Windows Update on Feb. 22, according to an  announcement on the Microsoft  Server Division blog.
Windows 7 users won't see any new features from this service  pack, which contains cumulative updates to the desktop operating system.  However, for Windows Server 2008 R2 users, SP1 contains two new virtualization  features: "dynamic memory" for Hyper-V and "RemoteFX" for  Remote Desktop Services.
Dynamic memory allows operators  to pool the memory available on hardware and allocate it to virtual machines as  needed. The RemoteFX capability supports an improved graphics experience on  thin-client devices when users connect remotely with servers in virtual desktop  infrastructure (VDI) scenarios.
Microsoft claims that dynamic memory use can boost VDI  density by 40 percent on Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 compared with Windows  Server 2008. The company's  tests used Windows 7 as the guest operating system.
In a slam thrown in VMware's direction, Microsoft claimed  that dynamic memory can be used to boost VDI scenarios without compromising  security. A Microsoft  virtualization blog pointed to VMware, accusing the company of recommending  disabling a Windows security feature called "Address Space Layout  Randomization" (ASLR) as a best practice in VDI deployments. ASLR protects  against malware-induced memory buffer attacks by loading DLL files into random  memory on boot-up, making the APIs harder for malware to find. Microsoft  doesn't recommend disabling ASLR and claims that using it does not slow VDI  performance to a significant degree.
RemoteFX works with Microsoft's Remote Desktop Services  (formerly known as "Terminal Services") and uses intellectual  property that Microsoft acquired with it bought Callista Technologies in 2008.  Microsoft's Server Division blog describes the RemoteFX technology as allowing  IT shops to "virtualize the graphical processing unit (GPU) on the server  side and deliver next-generation rich media and 3D user experiences for  VDI." The technology is described as allowing users remote access to  graphics-intensive applications, such as CAD programs, on thin-client devices.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.