Every year after VMworld EMA receives countless inquiries regarding the most notable vendors on the show floor. This time around, we have compiled a list consisting of startups taking a new look at traditional IT challenges, as well as larger and more mature companies that have launched industry transforming initiatives. Ultimately, this list of eight extraordinary vendors is focused on one central concept: customer value.
VMworld 2013 Digest – 8 Companies You Should Take a Closer Look At
By Torsten Volk on Aug 30, 2013 9:28:28 AM
OpenStack Thoughts – Part 2: Impact on VMware
By Torsten Volk on Jun 20, 2013 9:56:22 AM
At EMA, we constantly receive inquiries regarding what OpenStack means to the VMware portfolio. Is it a competing technology? Are OpenStack and vCloud complementary? Why did VMware join OpenStack? What are the typical use cases for OpenStack as opposed to vCloud? To address these questions, let’s take a step back and take a look at what OpenStack is and, as importantly, what it is not. This post is building on my previous article on the business value of OpenStack.
OpenStack Thoughts – Part 2: Impact on VMware
By Torsten Volk on Jun 19, 2013 9:33:19 AM
At EMA, we constantly receive inquiries regarding what OpenStack means to the VMware portfolio. Is it a competing technology? Are OpenStack and vCloud complementary? Why did VMware join OpenStack? What are the typical use cases for OpenStack as opposed to vCloud? To address these questions, let’s take a step back and take a look at what OpenStack is and, as importantly, what it is not. This post is building on my previous article on the business value of OpenStack.
Dell’s Clean Slate Approach to Enterprise IT
By Torsten Volk on May 8, 2013 7:22:09 PM
Breaking News: Dell Acquires Enstratius to Further Complete Its Cloud Story
OpenStack Thoughts – Part 1: Key Business Considerations
By Torsten Volk on Apr 22, 2013 10:27:18 AM
OpenStack’s huge momentum is undeniable. IBM, RedHat, NetApp, Rackspace, HP, Dell, Cisco, Intel and even VMware have committed significant funds and human resources to this project. But why would companies, that are otherwise competing rather fiercely, sit on one table to build an OpenSource cloud platform?
OpenStack Thoughts – Part 1: Key Business Considerations
By Torsten Volk on Apr 22, 2013 10:01:57 AM
OpenStack’s huge momentum is undeniable. IBM, RedHat, NetApp, Rackspace, HP, Dell, Cisco, Intel and even VMware have committed significant funds and human resources to this project. But why would companies, that are otherwise competing rather fiercely, sit on one table to build an OpenSource cloud platform?
The Software-Defined Datacenter: Part 3 of 4 – Questions and Battlefields
By Torsten Volk on Sep 24, 2012 11:24:05 AM
After talking about the “grand vision” of the Software Defined Datacenter (SDD) in part 1 of this series and discussing the individual components required to build out the SDD in part 2, this third part will be all about the three core challenges and controversies:
The Software-Defined Datacenter: Part 3 of 4 – Questions and Battlefields
By Torsten Volk on Sep 24, 2012 8:58:53 AM
After talking about the “grand vision” of the Software Defined Datacenter (SDD) in part 1 of this series and discussing the individual components required to build out the SDD in part 2, this third part will be all about the three core challenges and controversies:
The Software-Defined Datacenter: Part 1 of 4 – The Basics
By Torsten Volk on Aug 16, 2012 6:00:58 PM
The ultimate goal of the Software-Defined Datacenter (SDD), a term coined only a few months ago by VMware’s Steve Herrod, is to centrally control all aspects of the data center – compute, networking, storage – through hardware-independent management and virtualization software. This software will also provide the advanced features that currently constitute the main differentiators for most hardware vendors. The following quote by Steve Herrord succinctly sums up the bad news that VMware is delivering to many of these vendors: “If you’re a company building very specialized hardware … you’re probably not going to love this message.”