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Archive: https://archive.today/8GKSJ

From the post: "When Broadcom bought VMware for $69 billion last November, we knew there would be changes. What we didn't know is that Broadcom's radical changes would leave partners and customers alike questioning their commitment to VMware.

Personally, I've never been fond of VMware. But I know many IT people swear by its wide array of products. At least, they did until recently. Now that Broadcom is showing its cards for the virtualization powerhouse's future, it's another story."

Archive: https://archive.today/8GKSJ From the post: "When Broadcom bought VMware for $69 billion last November, we knew there would be changes. What we didn't know is that Broadcom's radical changes would leave partners and customers alike questioning their commitment to VMware. Personally, I've never been fond of VMware. But I know many IT people swear by its wide array of products. At least, they did until recently. Now that Broadcom is showing its cards for the virtualization powerhouse's future, it's another story."

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts (edited )

Sucks. Redhat was popular in enterprise ONLY because all of the techs recommended it as they used it at home for free.

Now, it’s Ubuntu for the same exact reason.

VMware will fail because the people who recommend it for corporate licensing won’t do so anymore.

Rinse and repeat. Boomers don’t understand this and are too focused on milking anything for money. Jew tier grossness.