Err.... the entire reason the school is replacing the system is because they ran the numbers, and found that the VMware solution was more than 4x more expensive than the equivalent Microsoft solution. The price difference is somewhat exaggerated because the school receives a discount on Microsoft licensing, but nevertheless, the cost difference is very real.
I'm not sure where you're getting your prices from.
According to Microsoft's site, the retail price of SCVMM is $869 per host. For VDI implementations, Microsoft offers a client license per VM as an alternative that costs $40.
To provide some perspective, a 12-core vSphere Advanced license will set you back $2,806, and a 10-seat VMware View pack will cost you $1815, or $181.50 per seat.
Bit of a difference, isn't it :awe:
I have, actually. VMware vSphere Advanced is $1,937 more per server. According to HP's site, $1,937 will get me 32GB of PC3-10600R memory.
VMware ESXi is certainly more efficient with its memory usage, but I think it's safe to say that an additional 32GB of RAM will more than make up for that.
In addition, licensing for Microsoft RDS also covers connections to a session host, which will be far more memory-efficient than a hypervisor running a bunch of desktop VMs.
VMware is in EXACTLY the same position Novell was. They both had an awesome product that is years ahead of the competition, and they both built an entire ecosystem around that product. Microsoft jumped into Novell's market by producing a much cheaper alternative that version over version gradually narrowed the functionality gap, until Novell customers simply couldn't justify the cost difference and began migrating to Microsoft's platform.
The virtualization world is going down that exact same path. Microsoft may not be able to meet the needs of a substantial portion of VMware's enterprise customer base, but they're capturing mid-market customers (who will likely stay with Microsoft as they grow), and Hyper-V is continually gaining features that previously kept customers on VMware. Unless VMware does something substantial (or substantially lowers their prices), I can see them being cornered into servicing a niche market that's not large enough to sustain the level of product development needed to compete in the greater virtualization market, just as Novell was.
Both solutions will probably meet the OP's needs, but claiming that VMware is "going no where, ever" is, quite frankly, ignorant. Microsoft has beaten numerous competitors with superior technology by offering a less expensive product that was good enough for most of the market, and there's absolutely nothing special about VMware that prevents them from ever encountering such a fate.
Well I guess you got it all figured out then. I guess I better run out and invest in 3com switches, because surely they are going overtake Cisco, being so much cheaper. Hell I guess Microsoft is in serious trouble with Office, hell with Open Office is so much cheaper. Your cheaper theory doesn't hold water.
As for your VDI pricing your a little off. Its $2245 for Advanced license in vmware. To tie into a comparable Hyper-V features you'll probably need to purchase an Enterprise Version of Server 2008, which will probably be about $1500. So now we come to centralized. You need SCCM as you priced out to be $869. I'll take your word for it. For 3 hosts you can get away with $1500 for vcenter foundation. But to go above that you'll need to go up to full vcenter which is pretty expensive at $5K.
But that is unlimited for number of hosts. I don't know if additional costs are would be needed for SCCM for a certain number of hosts. Thats just for the base foundation. Is Vmware more expensive, yes. So much so its cost prohibitive, I would say in most situations, no. The extra costs for the Data Recovery in Vmware alone is worth it in a critical infrastructure. VMware may die out, but if they do it will well after you and I both dead and buried many decades from now.