It's blatant gaslighting.This kind of outrageous bullshit from a corporate exec is adding insult to injury.
And they always do this now. Nobody believes your illogical nonsense, asshole.
Had our call earlier this week. Licensing is going up 3-4x. Already looking at alternatives.
Think of all the professional artists and designers out there who cut their teeth as a teen or college student on a cracked copy of Photoshop and have paid Adobe thousands of dollars in licences since.I will never understand how companies can't see that providing free, fully-featured (or near enough) versions to hobbyists/dabblers is free advertising and free skill lock-in. There's next to no cost, and the benefits are huge.
Anyone making money with your software is paying for it. You're not losing out because Joe is dabbling in his basement and learning skills he can use at work which may lead him to recommending your software to someone with purchasing power...
Absolutely necessary for lining the pockets of everyone involved in this tragedy before they all jump out the window of the burning building with their golden parachutes on."The changes that have taken place over the past 60+ days were absolutely necessary," he added.
They get their slice of the pie up front. Why would they care about the long term health of the company/industry? Same thing you see in other areas. Enshitification indeed.I was talking to a friend who worked in Finance, M&A to be specific. I asked him how merges and acquisitions happen and come they (banks) earn 1-5% without having a clue about the industry.
His share was “we look at the numbers, make projections and advice”.
Imagine how many companies have been bought and sold purely based on financial advice without any clue as to what makes a good product and keep customers satisfied .
This feels like Broadcom's new pricing is really saying they just don't want their smaller customers. Better to have lots of revenue from a few larger companies that have less support costs overall than to have to support the smaller companies too.I work at a small municipal ISP. We're working on re-negotiating our VMware environment contract now too and it isn't looking good for smaller companies. Yearly rate increases and perpetual renewals are a giant pain in the ass. I don't see us getting off VMware anytime soon, but who knows what next year's budget will bring?
Luckily, I run Proxmox on my homelab, despite the temptation to learn more about hypervisors/VMs from the formerly free offerings from VMware. Still not sure if I want to pony-up for the Proxmox Community support, especially after I add a couple more host machines next month, but folks gotta eat I guess...
Whales are lucrative.This feels like Broadcom's new pricing is really saying they just don't want their smaller customers. Better to have lots of revenue from a few larger companies that have less support costs overall than to have to support the smaller companies too.
Nutanix reps are happy as clams right now. Going to be a good year for their commissions.
I’ve been working with the IT team that handles the on prem hardware for my group (DevOps for our SaaS platform) to figure out a migration path, most of our deployment is cloud-based but we still have a relatively large on-prem vsphere footprint for internal tooling. Enterprise company with 10s of millions of customers on the platform I work on and while the rest of the company has a larger vsphere footprint than we do we’ll basically pull them along because our tooling has to be certified for several audit types, so the IT folks that handle hardware arent going to want a split. Overall the company is a huge customer that they’re likely to lose shortly.Yesterday the head of IT came into my office to get me ready to look for a replacement for VMware, so we're on our way out.
Doctorow - ever relevant. Whodathunkit?Customers don't like enshittification and get worried when you start doing it?
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Never underestimate the allure of short-term gains. It's the only thing that matters to the M&A crowd.I have to imagine that at some point this stops working... like... it's getting out of control how bad the incentives are. As a shareholder I'd be pissed (at least, a long term shareholder).
It's especially annoying as right now they aren't many high quality virtualisation apps for Apple Silicon, and VMWare has just gone through the effort to bring Fusion there.Loved VMWare fusion for Mac since version 1. We are now at 13.5. I hope they keep doing it. But why would Broadcom give a f... about Mac desktop virtualisation ?
NSX and Aria are definitely not junk if you are operating at any type of scale, I'd argue Aria is a critical component once you hit about 300 VMs if they aren't all IT managed. HCX needed work (but considering everyone got laid off, I suspect that it won't be appreciably improved from its current state). Tanzu is useless if you have a dedicated DevOps team that knows what they are doing but is alright if you are just getting started down that path and having your IT infrastructure engineers try to manage it. vSAN was great because you could buy the licenses for the hosts and jam just about as much storage as you'd like into your cluster, new licensing model (100GB per core and then additional spend required) is maybe set high enough that most people won't hit it... Not sure... But keeping with the theme of this acquisition, they missed the value prop for most people and changed the licensing model to be like everyone (any major SAN provider with a OpEx model, Nutanix, etc) else.Something that's also not discussed in the open is that broadcom is also forecing the major customers to get direct but also forced to move ALL their licences to a full VCloud Foundation stack. Even if they only need regular vsphere standard.
So on top on increase in price and subscription shift, add a ton of useless junk in the products and you get a x8 increase in price.
No wonder everyone is looking for a way out.
And for people that aren't yet looking, do it fast because switching take a bit of time...
What that sentence really should read is "VMware's end-user-friendly practices didn't align with our existing business model, therefore things needed to change so that we don't have to adapt.""The changes that have taken place over the past 60+ days were absolutely necessary,"
"all major enterprise software providers are on [subscription models] today.”
They want to sell off the consumer product segment, reportedly for $5B. So most likely they will keep it somehow updated till someone buys it from them.Loved VMWare fusion for Mac since version 1. We are now at 13.5. I hope they keep doing it. But why would Broadcom give a f... about Mac desktop virtualisation ?
Boy, that's just silly pricing. Rewriting new desktop virtualization from scratch, even with tons of features, could surely be done for less than $250 million.They want to sell off the consumer product segment, reportedly for $5B. So most likely they will keep it somehow updated till someone buys it from them.
The same can be said of Broadcom’s push to get people to buy VMware Cloud instead of on prem vSphere.
Also, Microsoft also isn’t treating it that way. They’re already committed to releasing an improved version in Windows Server 2025 and it’s their on premise offering. Other than withdrawing the one SKU there hasn’t been any sign Microsoft is ending or retiring Hyper-V.
Yeah, we renewed our perpetual license for another 3 years last summer.That they won't sell you a support renewal for the perpetual license. That's a deal breaker for most businesses of any size.
To be fair, on the flip side, VMware was already fighting against the breadth of open source and alternative offerings for virtualization. On most Windows and Apple machines, all that their software does nowadays is offer essentially a GUI and a couple support components (virtual disk/network/USB handling, etc.) on top of the OS and hardware provided virtualization stack.
And because they can leverage the server hypervisor technologies instead of having to have a completely separate codebase. The idea that the desktop tools can be spun off to a different company and continue to be viable products is... not one that I'm minded to believe is plausible.Workstation and Fusion for intel Macs only really still exist because of their use as VM building tools for server deployments.
Having used Fusion for years, but the last version I had a license for only supporting Intel Macs, I went Parallels for my new M2 Pro a year ago. (My first Apple Silicon machine) I can’t remember all the reasons, but Broadcom buying VMWare was definitely one of them. But generally I’ve found it just as good as Fusion ever was.It's especially annoying as right now they aren't many high quality virtualisation apps for Apple Silicon, and VMWare has just gone through the effort to bring Fusion there.
And Verge.io, and Scalelogic, and sundry others. And my own employer, as we provide consulting and implementation services in this space (including with Nutanix). Especially as the hardware requirements for vSphere 8 mean MANY of our clients need to do a hardware refresh, might as well just stand up that whole new cluster running something else. Every alternative has pretty good migration tools from VMware. Going the OTHER way is a lot more painful.Nutanix reps are happy as clams right now. Going to be a good year for their commissions.
Sadly nobody can really compete with ESXi right now, at least not in the Enterprise space. Where I work, we're considering different options, and will probably end up going with a couple alternatives that fit different use cases, some on-prem and some cloud hosted, and even a couple traditional baremetal systems.Nutanix reps are happy as clams right now. Going to be a good year for their commissions.
Boeing does that for you </s>... they are already opening the plane hatch ...
I don’t know how much a brand new virtualisation stack would cost, but a substantial part of the value of VMware fusion would be the licences and documentation required to ensure compatibility with existing VMs without being buried in Broadcom lawyers.Boy, that's just silly pricing. Rewriting new desktop virtualization from scratch, even with tons of features, could surely be done for less than $250 million.