Vmware Inc. - Display — - 8.17.2.14

Maritz pivoted hard. In 2009, VMware launched (the rechristened VI4), adding features like Storage VMotion, Fault Tolerance, and the vCloud API , allowing private clouds to mimic AWS. The tagline: “The cloud operating system.”

August 2007 – VMware’s IPO (NYSE: VMW) saw shares nearly double on the first day, valuing the company at ~$19 billion. The virtualization revolution had gone mainstream. Part III: The Cloud Shift & Paul Maritz Era (2008–2012) In 2008, Diane Greene was ousted as CEO (a decision many later regretted). EMC installed Paul Maritz, a former Microsoft veteran. At the same time, a new threat emerged: public cloud . Amazon Web Services (AWS) was growing fast. Why buy servers and hypervisors when you could rent API-accessible VMs by the hour? vmware inc. - display - 8.17.2.14

The reaction was immediate. Developers called it “sorcery.” For the first time, you could test a buggy kernel patch, crash the virtual machine, and simply restart the window. The host remained untouched. Maritz pivoted hard

8.17.2.14 – VMotion: Because hardware should never hold software hostage. End of the complete story of VMware Inc. The virtualization revolution had gone mainstream

Prologue: The Server Room Problem (1998) In the late 1990s, a small team of computer scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, led by Dr. Mendel Rosenblum (husband of Stanford professor Diane Greene), kept running into the same maddening problem. Their server rooms were graveyards of inefficiency.