Never say never. VMware is about to join the
OpenStack Foundation, a group initially backed by other industry giants as a
counterweight to VMware’s server virtualization dominance. Intel and NEC are
also on deck to join as Gold OSF members.
SOURCE
Original Source : Gigaom.com
Just in time for VMworld,
VMware is about to join the OpenStack Foundation as a Gold member, along with
Intel and NEC, according to a post on the OpenStack
Foundation Wiki. The applications for membership are on the agenda of the
August 28 OpenStack Foundation meeting.
A year ago, a VMware-OpenStack hookup would have been
seen as unlikely. When Rackspace and NASA launched the OpenStack Project more
than two years ago, it was seen as a competitive response to VMware’s server
virtualization dominance inside company data centers and to Amazon’s heft in
public cloud computing. Many tech companies including but not limited to
Rackspace, IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Citrix, Red Hat and Microsoft saw VMware as a
threat and were bound and determined to keep the company from extending its
virtualization lock into the cloud.
But, things change. VMware’s surprise acquisition of
Nicira and DynamicOps last month, showed there
might be a thaw in the air. For one thing, Nicira is an OpenStack player.
By bringing Nicira and DynamicOps into the fold, VMware appeared to be much more
willing
to work with non-VMware-centric infrastructure, as GigaOM’s Derrick Harris
reported at the time.
This is a symbolic coup for OpenStack and its biggest
boost since IBM
and Red Hat officially joined as Platinum members in April. And it’s
especially important since Citrix, a virtualization rival to VMware undercut
it’s own OpenStack participation last April by pushing
CloudStack as an alternative open source cloud stack.
OpenStack Gold members, which include Cloudscaling,
Dell, MorphLabs, Cisco Systems, and NetApp, pay a fee pegged at 0.25 percent of
their revenue — at least $50,000 but capped at $200,000 according to the foundation
wiki. (VMware’s fee will be $66,666, according to the application,
submitted by VMware CTO Steve Herrod, which is linked on the wiki post.)
Platinum members — AT&T, Canonical, HP, Rackspace, IBM, Nebula, Red Hat,
and SUSE – pay $500,000 per year with a 3-year minimum commitment.
SOURCE
Original Source : Gigaom.com
No comments:
Post a Comment