In an announcement made on Wednesday, VMware said it is changing its licensing model for vSphere 5 in response to negative feedback from customers. According to a blog posted by VMware vice president ...
We're looking at using ESXi 5 on a couple of dual CPU r510s with 128GB of RAM each, but without a SAN. We really just want to be able to utilize the hosts for multiple VMs, but our redundancy is ...
This seems like simple stuff I should be able to ascertain from their site, but I can't find a straight answer anywhere. Planning an esxi setup with 3 servers with local storage. We use Zmanda for ...
VMware on Tuesday unveiled a new virtual based licensing entitlement called vRAM, which pertains to the amount of physical memory configured to a virtual machine. Customers with vSphere Essentials, ...
In vSphere 5, VMware is moving from a licensing model that's based on the number of server cores to one that's based on the amount of vRAM, or memory that customers allocate to virtual machines on the ...
Three changes reduce the burden of VMware's licensing price hikes, but it's best to also adopt open source hypervisors to counter the hikes EMC VMware's vSphere 5 new licensing model raised eyebrows ...
The newly announced VMware vSphere 5 has a new “pooled” pricing model that charges customers based on the virtual memory configured in a virtual server. The model does away with limitations on the ...
VMware listened to the growing din around its vSphere 5 vRAM entitlements, and announced an increase of vRAM limits in a blog Wednesday. As a response to customer feedback, VMware announced that it ...
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