214
Broadcom lays off VMware employees after closing its $69 billion acquisition of the company
(www.businessinsider.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Well, sounds like VMWare is dead now then.
Hope those new ex-C suite billionaires enjoy the damage they've done to a previously reputable brand and product ๐คทโโ๏ธ glad I went with libvirt for virtualization instead 4 years ago when rebuilding my homelab
Edit: fix virtualization spelling error
Its most likely the non-technical employees being laid off. The accountants, lawyers and sales. Broadcom already has those departments, they dont need duplicates. The developers will probably stay though. i'm sure vmware products will continue to be just as unreliable as they have always been...
Its kinda suprising how bad virtualisation front end software is. I use libvirt at home as well, virt-manager locks up and crashes frequently, and throws obscure errors if i get the config wrong.
VMware workstation at work will crash weekly, taking down the entire host machine. Esxi/vcenter also seems to require constant admin to keep it alive, and even still requires a lot of downtime.
It's weird how I've worked in Large-scale Enterprise shops for more than the last decade, and ESX since about 4 has required absolutely no break-fix other than patching and whatever the underlying hardware needed. We're talking thousands of VMs, and flawless metro-vmotion of hundreds of hot-and-running streaming VMs at times, and over years. To see what you've written, it could be a very different product from the one I've used, as I've seen none of what you mention.
I hope you can see the same reliability one day, from the product where you've migrated.
I dont do the admin side of it, but as a user we see frequent outages (had one today :( ). I hope to one day I see the same reliability youve experienced :(