The people I work with have a very different perspective on this stuff. They want the facilities to most closely resemble what people are going to use at home and/or at work. I'm having to expend all my efforts at the moment justifying the use of VMs for older versions of Windows so that I don't have to configure a four-way multiboot system (what everyone else wants) as it is.
I think it's important some times to try and get an outside source to come validate what you already know. It's not for your own validation, but for those above you who cannot be convinced. I mentioned earlier to get someone in your lab to try and sell you something (even if you don't want it). This method has been working for our team in certain cases. Not specifically for my manager because I'm very fortunate to have a great boss who is very technical and practical with these things, but for his boss and his bosses boss (who are also very technical, but require us to prove why one solution is better than another when spending this amount of money). For the past several weeks we've had meetings with Cisco, CDW, and another local vender to discuss solutions to a problem we are trying to solve for a project. Since we're looking to acquire almost 30 blades, we needed to make arguments for or against the rack vs. blade argument. I know we're talking a different level of budget, but the concept of getting multiple venders to converge on an agreement of a setup can help enforce your opinion to your boss to show that it's not just you, but also several other technology leaders.
Your job is cockblocking your knowledge expansion and progression in the advancement of labs and technology. I can only hope that maybe some day you can find the courage to break free from its grips and get into a place that will make use of all your skills and actually teach you something. Don't mistake my remark for having it teach you something as an insult. I mean it in quite the opposite as in a challenge much greater than you've faced today that teaches you something new that you might not be able to do on your own.