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97 bytes added, 03:02, 1 April 2015
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== 2000 ==
* Nov, 2000 - : Limited public beta testing -- we were (providing free VEs to people to run their stuff at. I remember we had to modify EULA to disallow all kinds of abuses, such as bots and CPU hoggers).
== 2002 ==
* Jan, 2002 - : SWsoft (now known as Odin) initially released a product for Linux named Virtuozzo. Their current product is named Virtuozzo. It was Virtuozzo 2.0, went out 10 Jan 2002<ref>[http://www.odin.com/news/id,6987 press releaseSWsoft Releases Virtuozzo 2.0, Bringing Mainframe-Inspired Functionality to Intel-Based Servers] went out 10 Jan 2002.</ref>
== 2005 ==
== 2007 ==
* 13 Mar, 2007 - : Port to RHEL5 kernel <ref>[https://lwn.net/Articles/225990/ OpenVZ software for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5]</ref>
== 2008 ==
* 17 Apr, 2008 - : Rebase to kernel 2.6.25<ref>[http://openvz.livejournal.com/21817.html 2.6.25 is out; memory controller and network namespaces are in]</ref>* Oct, 2008 - : OpenVZ [http://openvz.livejournal.com/24651.html ported to ARM (Gumstix Overo)]. Parallels company is in top 10 Linux kernel contributors with their patches for Linux containers. Our contributions to the kernel at that time was PID, IPC, and network namespaces, with the last one being the biggest (mostly developed by xemul@ and den@).
== 2011 ==
* Apr, 2015 - Parallels company opensources the most components of their own commercial product Virtuozzo (formely know Parallels Cloud Server and Parallels Server Bare Metal)
 
== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}
== External links ==

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