HPE Tempts VMware Users, Partners With Year of Free Virtualization Software (arstechnica.com) 25
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Hewlett Packard Enterprise's (HPE) new virtualization software promotion will likely pique the interest of end users and resellers who are unhappy with Broadcom's pricing of VMware. During its HPE Discover event in Las Vegas this week, HPE announced that customers could use its "HPE Morpheus Software -- VM Essentials" offering for free for "up to one year," per a press release. HPE's website describes its virtualization platform as a "VMware alternative." It includes a hardware virtual machine (HVM) hypervisor and unified management and lets users "manage VMware ESXi and HVM clusters from one console and migrate when you're ready," HPE's website says. "New VM Essentials customers can receive up to one free year of licenses for VM Essentials, a year of HPE Zerto for $1 to support non-disruptive migration to HPE virtual machines, and 0 percent interest on software through HPE Financial Services," HPE's announcement reads, referring to HPE's group for helping IT teams manage funding.
Free for a year is cheaper than what Broadcom has charged for VMware vSphere since taking over. VMware prices have skyrocketed due to VMware's parent company eliminating perpetual licenses and bundling products into expensive packages. Notably, per its website, HPE recommends charging $600 per CPU socket per year for VM Essentials; Broadcom has controversially shifted vSphere licensing pricing to a per-core basis. "Customers are feeling quite a bit of pain in the change that some of the virtualization companies have put there, specifically Broadcom," Jeremiah Jenson, VP of HPE's North American channel and partner ecosystem, told CRN. The executive claimed that VM Essentials could bring up to 90 percent cost savings compared to VMware while also helping to "eliminate vendor lock-in and simplify hybrid IT."
From March 1 to June 30, HPE has also been offering a free year of VM Essentials via rebate to customers who buy an AMD server and a one-year VM Essentials license. VM Essentials is only available through channel partners, a stark contrast from Broadcom's VMware approach, where the chip giant has drastically reduced the number of resellers that can sell VMware products. HPE's new promotion aims to entice customers to more deeply consider migrating off VMware. [...] HPE also announced that it would give 600 reseller partners who earn the HPE partner program's Private Cloud with Virtualization competency by the end of the year free VM Essentials software licenses for three years. Partners still have to pay support costs, though. The benefit is "a step in the correct direction," said Dean Colpitts, CTO of Canadian managed services provider (MSP) Members IT Group (MITG), which VMware cut from its reseller program after 19 years of partnership a year ago. However, limiting the promotion to 600 partners is "very shortsighted." He believes that HPE should give all of its partners VM Essentials "to facilitate getting [VM Essentials] into customer sites and displacing the competitors."
"They need to fling [VM Essentials] as far and as fast as they possibly [can] to immediately gain traction and draw ISVs to them, which will increase adoption even more," he said.
Free for a year is cheaper than what Broadcom has charged for VMware vSphere since taking over. VMware prices have skyrocketed due to VMware's parent company eliminating perpetual licenses and bundling products into expensive packages. Notably, per its website, HPE recommends charging $600 per CPU socket per year for VM Essentials; Broadcom has controversially shifted vSphere licensing pricing to a per-core basis. "Customers are feeling quite a bit of pain in the change that some of the virtualization companies have put there, specifically Broadcom," Jeremiah Jenson, VP of HPE's North American channel and partner ecosystem, told CRN. The executive claimed that VM Essentials could bring up to 90 percent cost savings compared to VMware while also helping to "eliminate vendor lock-in and simplify hybrid IT."
From March 1 to June 30, HPE has also been offering a free year of VM Essentials via rebate to customers who buy an AMD server and a one-year VM Essentials license. VM Essentials is only available through channel partners, a stark contrast from Broadcom's VMware approach, where the chip giant has drastically reduced the number of resellers that can sell VMware products. HPE's new promotion aims to entice customers to more deeply consider migrating off VMware. [...] HPE also announced that it would give 600 reseller partners who earn the HPE partner program's Private Cloud with Virtualization competency by the end of the year free VM Essentials software licenses for three years. Partners still have to pay support costs, though. The benefit is "a step in the correct direction," said Dean Colpitts, CTO of Canadian managed services provider (MSP) Members IT Group (MITG), which VMware cut from its reseller program after 19 years of partnership a year ago. However, limiting the promotion to 600 partners is "very shortsighted." He believes that HPE should give all of its partners VM Essentials "to facilitate getting [VM Essentials] into customer sites and displacing the competitors."
"They need to fling [VM Essentials] as far and as fast as they possibly [can] to immediately gain traction and draw ISVs to them, which will increase adoption even more," he said.
Where did this come from? (Score:2)
Ok so I understand that they bought up Morpheus a while back, and it does some fantastic things with current state of virtualization with all the terraform and container tools that one could want...
But where did the underlying bare metal hypervisor come from? Is it BSD based so that it can be commercialized fully? Is it a significant enhancement over ZenServer? One doesn't usually just poof a new bare metal hypervisor out of nowhere.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
In the end we're just developing our own code on top of KVM/etc. Thankfully we're making this a big project betting on Rust and all the awesome Rust programmers
Re:Where did this come from? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes we use proxmox qemu kvm with own own code for what doesn't come out of the box. qemu kvm is just as good as anything out there. Proxmox comes with a lot already included and you can run it for free and get updates for free if you enable the dev repository for proxmox packages while the bare metal host is mostly debian running with an optimized proxmox kernel.
Does it really matter? (Score:3)
The benefit is "a step in the correct direction," said Dean Colpitts, CTO of Canadian managed services provider (MSP) Members IT Group (MITG), which VMware cut from its reseller program after 19 years of partnership a year ago. However, limiting the promotion to 600 partners is "very shortsighted." He believes that HPE should give all of its partners VM Essentials "to facilitate getting [VM Essentials] into customer sites and displacing the competitors."
This strikes me as a rather temporary solution to Broadcom's dickishness. HP has demonstrated time and time again their willingness to ass-rape customers, at least in the consumer / small business sector. If HP manages to capture the virtualization market, then they'll repeat Broadcom's bad behaviour. That's just what corporations do.
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You're complaining about HP Inc's business practices. Hewlett Packard Enterprise and HP Inc. parted ways 11 years ago. (Hint: the latter's name is a pun on "ink").
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why now? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's been three years since the Broadcom acquisition closed. Why was HPE not trying to capture those customers earlier? They bought Morpheus just a year after Broadcom bought VMware.
And why are any customers still on VMware? I know it takes a while to plan migrations but come on now. And Broadcom fired most of the VMware engineers years ago so it's not like you're sticking around for the cutting-edge R&D. VMware is in the same bucket as Solaris and has been for a few years now ... if you HAVE to stay on the platform, fine, but most customers should have left already.
Anyway Morpheus VM Essentials is just Ubuntu with KVM, it's nothing special. HPE bought Morpheus for Morpheus Enterprise. VM Essentials was just the toy in the Cracker Jack box. HPE should have either pushed this earlier or killed the product.
Re:why now? (Score:5, Interesting)
Depending on your situation, your options are basically Nutanix, Microsoft or maybe DIY (if you are big enough, this is what we're doing.)
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I have heard about Open Nebula ( https://opennebula.io/ [opennebula.io] )
It seems to have both a free version and an Enterprise version for paid support. Haven't had time to look into it much, but it might have better migration off of VMWare.
Of course it is easy to SAY you are Enterprise ready, it is much harder to actually BE Enterprise ready.
Longer trial ? (Score:4, Interesting)
Great news.......
ESXI - Free forever.
PVE - Free forever.
RedHat Kubernetes VM - Free for Partners.
Suse Virtualizaion - Free forever.
Ovirt - Free foreve.
HyperV 2019 - free for the next 3 years (until is end of support).
HPE - 1 year Trial....
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
There's also OpenStack. It's been in use at a number of large enterprises for years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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There are some pretty big names that use Openstack at significant scale in production. There are more, but here are the ones that come to mind:
Walmart
PayPal
BMW Group
Intel
Bloomberg
Volkswagen Group
Comcast
AT&T
Verizon
CERN
Disney
China Mobile
Deutsche Telekom
Telefonica
Banco Santander
Swisscom
You can either roll your own or partner up with Canonical or some other professionally supported version.
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Probably all of them also use VMware software.
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I think it's becoming less likely over time as Broadcom burns those bridges. I'm personally aware of a few that definitely have exited VMWare entirely (for the same reason they exited their legacy CA tools entirely).
Yea. Nah. (Score:2)
Thanks to the existence of things like XCP-ng and, to a lesser extent, Proxmox, I'm not the least bit tempted.
Hell, I'd choose to use OpenStack, or even stab myself in the eye, before using HPE Morpheus or VMWare.
Re: HP is not a virtualization company (Score:3)
No, but HPE is. HPE does not sell printer ink.
not good enough (Score:2)
Because HP is so benevolent! (Score:2)
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HPE is not HP. Do not confuse them. HPE was spun off into a completely separate company ages ago and has no business relationship or ownership relationship (different stock tickers etc) , decades ago.
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Same genetic background. I trust them as far as I can spit a rat.
Anyway, there are free and paid for solutions, with and without support that fit the bill at least as well as this one. Nothing stands out about the offer.
wait... (Score:2)