Former Rivals VMware And AWS Become Cloud Partners

VMware Cloud services will be soon be available on Amazon Web Services (AWS) infrastructure, confirming rumours that the former bitter rivals would be joining forces.

The partners hope to target businesses running on-premise virtualisation but keen to harness the advantages of the public cloud.

By combining existing investments in virtualisation, tools and training with the feature set, regular updates and scalability of the AWS, VMware hopes to make its services more appealing.

Breaking bread with the enemy

vmwareThe partnership would be similar to the one VMware struck with IBM to run its virtualisation software on Softlayer cloud.

Essentially, through these partnerships VMware extends the scope in how its software is deployed and prevents locking-in its customers to using one cloud platform or choosing between on-premise or cloud deployments.

For its part, Amazon gets access to VMware’s significant enterprise customer base and thus help them compete in what has become a very competitive market between some of the largest technology companies in the world.

VMware licences and discounts will still be valid and code and applications can be migrated easily, Amazon claimed. It even said entire workloads or data centres could be moved to AWS with “a few clicks”.

Read More: Amazon CTO: We’ve always been a tech company

Best of both worlds

“This new offering is a native, fully managed VMware environment on the AWS Cloud that can be accessed on an hourly, on-demand basis or in subscription form,” said Jeff Barr at AWS.

“It includes the same core VMware technologies that customers run in their data centres today including vSphere Hypervisor (ESXi), Virtual SAN (vSAN), and the NSX network virtualization platform and is designed to provide a clean, seamless experience.”

“VMware Cloud on AWS runs directly on the physical hardware, while still taking advantage of a host of network and hardware features designed to support our security-first design model. This allows VMware to run their virtualisation stack on AWS infrastructure without having to use nested virtualisation.”

AWS added that because VMware would be running in the same data centres at AWS, businesses would benefit from lower latency and could even set up AWS Direct Connect for a dedicated network connection.

The division, formed by Amazon a decade ago, now has 35 ‘Availability Zones’ in 13 regions with five more regions now planned to launch within the next year. These are Canada, China, Ohio (USA), the UK, and France.

EVENT: What next for VPN?

Think you know all about Amazon Web Services? Try our quiz!

Steve McCaskill

Steve McCaskill is editor of TechWeekEurope and ChannelBiz. He joined as a reporter in 2011 and covers all areas of IT, with a particular interest in telecommunications, mobile and networking, along with sports technology.

Recent Posts

Meta Agrees To Halt Personalised Ads For UK Woman

Meta says it will stop targeting personalised Facebook ads at UK woman after legal battle,…

8 hours ago

Nine EU Countries Push For New Chips Act

Nine EU countries led by the Netherlands push European Commission for follow-up to 2023 EU…

14 hours ago

Ex-Cruise Chief Vogt Raises $150m For Robotics Start-Up

Former Cruise chief executive Kyle Vogt reportedly raises $150m for The Bot Company at $2bn…

14 hours ago

Gotbit Founder Pleads Guilty To Crypto Manipulation

Gotbit founder Aleksei Andriunin pleads guilty to manipulating tokens' trading volume and price after extradition…

15 hours ago

ByteDance’s Largest US Investors ‘In Talks’ Over TikTok Deal

ByteDance's largest US investors reportedly in talks for majority stake in US TikTok spin-off, with…

15 hours ago

Apple Reshuffles Executives As AI Plans Struggle

Apple reportedly reassigns Siri development to executive behind Vision Pro after acknowledging delays to much-hyped…

16 hours ago