VMware recently announced a change to its software licensing model that caps the number of cores supported in the CPU, effective April 2, 2020. Why did VMware do this? What is the real impact to IT?
SUSE and Cloudbase promise zero-downtime migrations off VMware, but whether enterprises are ready to move is another question ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Broadcom’s recent decision to discontinue the sale of ...
With VMware Cloud Foundation 9 migration mandated by 2027, IT leaders face compressed timelines, cost pressures, and a chance ...
Effective April 2, VMware will increase its CPU licensing pricing model for customers who have more than 32 cores. VMware channel partners talk to CRN about the market impact. VMware is doubling the ...
Throughout the course of the last decade, VMware virtualization has become the preferred platform for hundreds of thousands of customers, many of them running their Business Critical Applications on ...
Broadcom's price increases and policy changes have led many VMware customers to look for other options. Nodeweaver is ...
‘AMD has a few levels above 32 cores. For those that are, we tried to be as flexible as possible in giving customers a fair amount of time to grandfather them in with the goal being zero impact to our ...
VMware's chief executive has apologized for the disruption caused by a licensing issue which resulted in the company's latest hypervisors, ESX 3.5 Update 2 and ESXi 3.5 Update 2, not powering on after ...
It was all the buzz this past week: EMC VMware has changed its licensing with vSphere 5 from a model that is based on processor cores and physical memory to a model that charges based upon both a ...