I found the mobile manager in Oracle VM a wonderful feature, in comparison with the command line interface.
There's room for improvement in terms of productivity in Oracle VM, because I find Nutanix has better productivity.
Oracle VM can have future improvements through the addition of newer features.
I'm also looking forward to a newer product version for Oracle VM, including making it compatible with Kubernetes and other modern technologies.
Oracle VM is so stable, that I find the databases are much better in Oracle Linux and Oracle VM.
Oracle VM is a scalable product.
The technical support from Oracle is wonderful. They provide best in class support, which I experience whenever I talk to their support team.
The initial setup for Oracle VM was easy. It wasn't a complex process.
Oracle VM pricing is expensive, because it runs on the Oracle database, and the Oracle database runs very smoothly on Oracle VM and Oracle Linux, and this can make pricing more expensive.
I was able to evaluate Oracle Solaris Virtualization that only runs on SPARC servers, and only runs on Oracle Solaris.
I'm working with Oracle VM, and I'm an administrator for it.
The customers use Oracle VM in their companies, and they're given ownership, so I'm currently working with other customers on their active assets.
My suggestion to people looking into implementing Oracle VM is that they should choose Oracle Exadata, instead of the Dell server, Lenovo server, or other products, because upgrading those takes a healthy amount of time, and they also have some vulnerability with other vendor products.
This is why I'm suggesting an integrated product like Oracle Exadata, which runs on Oracle Solaris, which runs on Oracle Linux, and it also has a database function, and it's completely integrated, and has built-in networking and record storage.
I would rate Oracle VM a nine out of ten.