VMworld 2015: The Future Is Now?
     
  I was at VMworld 2015, and watched the keynotes and read the  press releases and came away with a pretty good idea of what VMware wants the  public to know about going forward. And if I were to sum up what I learned at  the show, it would be this: VMware wants you in the cloud, and now. 
Taking Risks
  
  This is a dangerous strategy for VMware. I thought the  company did a good job laying  out its vision of the Unified Hybrid Cloud platform, and what it could mean  for IT. It sounds promising, too -- the ability to move seamlessly and  transparently between public and private clouds is fantastic (and yeah, the cross-cloud  vMotion demo was awesome). If VMware makes it easier to move on-premises apps  to the cloud without a huge amount of disruption, so much the better (although  I remain skeptical at how easy this will be). 
  In addition, VMware EVO SDDC (which replaces, in name at  least, EVO:RACK) looks like a strong product. "Software-defined" is the future, and VMware is out in  front on it. Doing things in software provides a flexibility and scalability  that just can't be matched in the physical world.
 Time Sync
 
  My big concern for VMware is one of timing, and where most  enterprises are in their transitions to the cloud and software-defined  computing. How many of you are still figuring out your private cloud strategy?  How many are using public cloud for nothing more than dev testing or similar  non-production tasks? My hunch is that most shops are still taking baby steps  into the shallow end of the cloud pool, worried about just how cold the water  will be when they plunge in.
  It's often been said that corporations are years behind --  often 5-to-7 years behind -- the technology curve. Companies often don't move  to Windows Server nearly as quickly as Microsoft would like, for example. The  same dynamic exists when it comes to virtualization; I'd bet a fair amount of  money that the huge majority of datacenters are still running vSphere 5.5 (or  5.0) instead of 6.0. 
 Eve of Disruption
 
  But that kind of upgrade isn't nearly as ulcer-inducing as  re-architecting apps for the cloud or re-thinking your entire networking  concepts. In other words, resistance to this kind of change could be greater  than the normal "new version of standard infrastructure product is  released," which often requires little more than learning a new UI and  what apps it might break.
  Containers are in a similar boat. There's lots of talk about  them, and VMware played them up big time at the show. But again, how many shops  are using them in regular, large-scale production? My sense is that it's still  a very small percentage. They're being studied, sure, and likely rolled out on  a test basis. Major implementations, however, are likely to be pretty far in  the future for most companies. 
 Future Tense
 
  That's how I felt about VMworld 2015: lots of cool stuff was  demonstrated in the keynotes, but little that was of immediate practical use.  The direction CEO Pat Gelsinger is taking the company seems sensible, in my  mind; cloud and software-defined computing and containers are coming, and are  the future, and it's good that VMware is getting out on the leading edge of  that. But if I'm an admin at the show, and looking for something that will  dramatically shape my workday right now, I didn't hear or see much that tickled  my itching ears. 
 
	Posted by Keith Ward on 09/10/2015 at 9:43 AM