This is the best summary I could come up with:
Many VMware employees learned Monday that their positions will be eliminated following Broadcom closing its acquisition of the company.
Employees whose positions were eliminated received an email on Monday viewed by Business Insider that said, "Broadcom recently completed its acquisition of VMware.
As part of integration planning, and following an organizational needs assessment, we identified go-forward roles that will be required within the combined company.
We want to make this transition as smooth as possible, including offering you a generous severance package and providing you a non-working paid notice period," the email continued.
VMware had already begun job cuts prior to the acquisition closing, BI previously reported.
In the past year, several top VMware executives have left the cloud computing company.
The original article contains 333 words, the summary contains 121 words. Saved 64%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Guess I’m moving to proxmox
Free ESXi will also be killed off I bet
I’ve been using PM for about a year now. It’s quite nice, although I’ll fully admit I’ve barely scratched the surface of what it can do. I’ve heard a lot of people transition to Prox and adapt fairly quickly.
It’s not… A walk in the park, and some stuff will have you manually editing files, as the UI might be missing those. But so far I’ve been a happy user for a bunch of years.
Yeah, not unlike the Linux experience; there will be times where you have to touch and/or nano configs. If you’re comfortable with such things, excellent. If not… you fidna get comfortable.
I can’t count the number of times I had to do that under ESXi, or do manual vSAN recoveries, so I found myself quite comfortable doing that in proxmox too (especially since proxmox is regular debian).
I’ve got the project on my list to test oVirt.
As someone who moved to Proxmox for my 3-node homelab, good luck.
I find the automation for deploying VMs to be woefully incapable compared to Terraform/PowerCLI on the VMware side. Not to mention things like load balancing/DRS are flat out missing.
I managed to get it stable enough for homelab-y things like *arr, plex, DNS, etc - but at this point I would quit rather than use it in a production environment. Or maybe I would just look at bare metal kubernetes instead.
Your use case sounds like kubernetes would be a way better fit as dynamicly scaling and load balancing is kinda the whole point of kubernetes.
Proxmox clustering is essentially just for adding redundancy and nothing more.
Have you seen xcp-ng and xen orchestra?
IaaS or gtfo? I would love to see more development in this area, but I think you might be covering a bit too much ground with “in a production environment”. Tons of smaller (and not so small) companies are still running piles of bare metal chaos and could benefit greatly from even the simplest Proxmox setup.
What OS would you use for the bare metal install?
Probably Debian or Ubuntu LTS?
Huh, I use terraform for my Proxmox clusters without any major issues. What kind of trouble does it give you?
The biggest issue is being in aware of migrations for load balancing. If VM 1 is deployed to Node 1 with Terraform, then is moved to Node 2 at some point for load balancing, Terraform tries to recreate it on Node 1.
Also, I have a slight moral objection to one of the top providers being developed by a for-profit prison company.
Article has paywall, I couldn’t pass.
First up in today’s most in-shocking new…
In a previous article: Everything we know about what’s going on at VMware as employees leave in droves ahead of the $61 billion Broadcom acquisition
talent at VMware has started to leave the company because of uncertainty around the deal’s influence and hints from Broadcom’s CEO about ending remote work
From the get-go, Broadcom’s plan to buy VMware seemed far-fetched. The companies have little overlap, and with its massive price tag, the acquisition would rank among the highest ever in tech.
Yeah, this was doomed. It looks like nobody in the know was surprised. Customers, employees and analysts saw the layoffs coming.
I wonder where these people went. With the announcement of Apple’s gaming support, my bet is on that or over to Oracle to work on VirtualBox.
If your company is being acquired, you need to assume you, the employee, are disposable and not the reason for the acquisition.
Particularly Broadcom, which is where old technologies go to die.
Isn’t that IBM?
There are several places - Computer Associates was the olther classic place - until it was bought by Broadcom.
Oh, did they? Well that’s some shit that floats upwards!
- Oracle has entered the chat *
Yup. Warm up that resume and work on an exit strategy.
Wait how in the ever loving fuck is VMware worth $70B?
They run their servers on a $69.9B Yacht.
They’re the single largest name in virtualization. Almost half of all companies using virtualization are using VMware. And that’s a lot of companies. Companies who have to pay licenses to use it. That’s a lot of worth.
What do I use now? I’ve tried virtualbox and it didn’t work well for me. Do I use Proxmox?
Proxmox for the win. As a complete hobbyist it’s been amazingly easy to use with enough features to keep me learning.
Yeah, it’s solid. Also be sure to check out Proxmox Backup.
Check out Xen, XCP-ng (was Xenserver), and/or KVM.
What does this mean for the spring framework? Doesn’t VMware maintain spring these days ? Or is it unrelated ?
Damn vmware was miserable enough to work with already. Guess broadcom felt like pissing in the piss lake.
Thankfully we have KVM still ticking along
Uhh what does this mean for workspace one?
They will be gutted of talent, like all other vmware products.
It will get more fragile, with less updates and features, and likely cost considerably more when your renewal is up.
Ugh. I guess time start thinking of either birfurcating mdm or finding a uem that doesn’t cost an absolute fuck ton
Theres always intune, but yeah.
My current company is a step ahead. The engineer running workspace one left and they didn’t backfill, so its going to shit all on its own. Beat Broadcom to the punch by almost a year.
We are truly innovators.
I tried to build an actual CPE team so we didn’t have to rely on sass shit but God the investment for in home code and shit is multimillion. So now we are stuck with these ducking companies
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That was fucking fast, interesting, maybe that makes space for the competitors than
They’ve had a year to work on the layoffs.
Yep my buddy at VMware was waiting to get laid off all year. Finally happened two weeks ago
Paid time off and a severance and they don’t have to return to office? Sounds like the folks getting laid off got the better deal