Vmware Inc. - Display - 8.17.2.14 [ TOP-RATED ]
But VMware’s real ace was its partnership with hardware vendors. HP, Dell, Cisco, and others baked VMware into their server bundles. By 2011, over 95% of Fortune 1000 companies ran VMware.
Today, under Broadcom, VMware is no longer a visionary leader but a cash engine. The name remains on products – vSphere 8, NSX, vSAN – but the soul is different. Yet every time a server runs 20 VMs instead of one, or a VM live-migrates without a hiccup, the ghost of that Palo Alto lab lives on. vmware inc. - display - 8.17.2.14
(symbolic): August 17, 2002, 2:14 PM – In a cramped Palo Alto lab, a VMware engineer performs the first live migration of a running web server from one physical host to another with zero downtime. The team celebrates with pizza. They call it VMotion . This moment—8.17.2.14—is later engraved on a small plaque in VMware’s Building 1. It represents the birth of the “always-on” data center. Part II: The EMC Acquisition & Hypervisor Wars (2004–2007) In December 2003, Diane Greene received an offer she couldn’t refuse. EMC Corporation , the storage giant, acquired VMware for $635 million. Many predicted death by corporate absorption. Instead, EMC left VMware largely independent, funding its R&D aggressively. But VMware’s real ace was its partnership with
In a final irony, the date that once symbolized technical wizardry (first live migration) now marks a legacy of lock-in. Some engineers from that 2002 lab have left; others stay, maintaining the kernel of code that still runs inside data centers for 99% of the Fortune 500. Epilogue: The Virtual Legacy VMware did not invent virtualization – IBM mainframes had it in the 1960s. But VMware commoditized it, turning a mainframe luxury into a ubiquitous x86 utility. It enabled the modern cloud era, even if the cloud giants eventually ate its lunch. Today, under Broadcom, VMware is no longer a
August 17, 2016 – On the 14th anniversary of the first VMotion, Dell’s merger closes. Pat Gelsinger stands in front of employees: “Our north star hasn’t changed. We will run any app, on any cloud, on any device.” But behind the scenes, debt from the merger pressures VMware to deliver ever-higher margins. Part V: Multi-Cloud Pivot & The Kubernetes Gambit (2017–2020) The world had changed. Kubernetes had won the container orchestration war. AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud were giants. VMware’s on-premises dominance began to feel like a moat around a shrinking castle.

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