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| Gain in-depth skills and hands on experience with ESX Server 3.5 and VirtualCenter 2.5 today! Rock Solid Technical Services brings 17 years of proven experience into the classroom to give students a solid understanding of virtualization technology. | |
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Kirk is an Information Technology Professional with over 15 years of experience in both the datacenter and the classroom.
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"I was unprepared for the quantity and quality of the information I got at my VMWare class. Good job guys!"
-Alicia McDonald |
| Advanced Classes! |
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Rock Solid Technical is pleased to announce advanced VMware Infrastructure 3 classes! Specifically tailored for students who want to gain a greater depth and understanding of the VMware ESX 3.5 and VirtualCenter 2.5 environment. Our class begins with the installation and configuration of VirtualCenter and moves forward through many advanced-level configurations that will help you improve performance and reliability in your environment. Here are some of the highlights of our I3 advanced class: · What’s new in ESX 3.5/VC 2.5 · Advanced Virtual Networking o Security o Traffic Shaping for performance o Getting the most out of multiple NIC’s o VMKernel and Shared Storage o ESX Firewall Settings · Advanced Cluster Configuration o When to group/separate VM’s o Startup Order o Using Vmotion & automation
Enterprise SAN Configuration o ESX Storage architecture o iSCSI and Fibre channel SAN o Storage replication
Disaster Recovery o DR strategy and models o DR tools o VMware Site Recovery Manager · Virtualizing VirtualCenter o Is it appropriate in your environment? o How to license a virtual VirtualCenter o Configuring ESX to support virtualized VirtualCenter · Advanced Management Techniques o Using shares and reservations correctly o Resource Pools as a management tool o Users, Groups and Permissions · VMware Virtual Desktop Infrastructure o When to Virtualize difficult environments
o The lights-out data center in the virtual age |
| Advanced Classes! |
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VMware has done a remarkable job of anticipating our needs with regard to the virtual environment, yet sometimes there is a need to copy, clone or duplicate a virtual disk from the perspective of the operating system. Such situations arise when snapshots run out-of-control, disks need to be converted from IDE to SCSI (VMware Server only) or any situation which the clone command or vmkfstools can't address. |
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