In my experience, you don't need a very powerful machine to run KVM (or other virtualization solutions). The main requirements are memory (very cheap now) and storage.That may very well be the case, but being able to SUPPORT kvm, and actually RUNNING kvm are two totally different things.
Yes, but you can use the current releases of Promox for these older machines.And although the demise of some older machines is in sight, they are not going to all suddenly disappear mid next year. They will be around for a bit still to come. (IE6, anyone?)
The main point is that openvz does not seem to evoluate very fast in the last times, but KVM is developping very fast.
So it makes sense to have a separate branch to follow the KVM pace.
For example in proxmox VE 1.4b, the new storage model is only available for KVM :
"Currently only KVM guests can benefit from these enhancements, containers still need to be stored on local storage"
Alain
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