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George Crump

October 8, 2025 by George Crump

Licensing debates dominate the VMware Exit conversation, but the real issue is VMware’s protection problem. The platform was never designed to protect itself; it has always relied on third parties. While an ecosystem sounds good in theory, it also introduces complexity, increases exposure, and raises costs. IT professionals need to consider exiting VMware as more than just a hypervisor replacement. It presents a strategic opportunity to enhance core data protection, consolidate infrastructure software, repatriate cloud workloads, and lay the groundwork for AI.

From the start, VMware outsourced backup, replication, and disaster recovery to third-party vendors. Organizations filled the data protection gap by layering products on top of the hypervisor. Each solved part of the problem. None provided a complete solution. The ecosystem approach to data resilience, protection, and disaster recovery creates another siloed infrastructure that adds roughly 40 percent to the cost of the production environment. It was a clever way to hide the protection fragmentation problem behind a “feature.”

VMware’s Protection Problem

The operational burden of VMware’s protection problem matches the financial one. One team manages backup schedules. Another maintains replication appliances. A third builds disaster recovery runbooks and runs annual failover tests. When a failure occurs, recovery becomes an exercise in assembling pieces that rarely align under pressure.

By comparison, VergeOS takes the opposite approach—embedding protection directly into the same operating environment that runs workloads. It eliminates the external layers that make recovery slow, expensive, and unreliable.

Protection Fragmentation Is Expensive

Protection fragmentation separates data, configuration, and metadata across different systems. Backup applications capture virtual machine disks. Replication tools copy them to another site. DR orchestration attempts to restart them with the correct IP addresses and network mappings. Each layer introduces lag, overhead, and risk.

Recovery times stretch into hours because these systems were never designed to work together. During an absolute failure, IT teams discover that the backup copy is missing network configurations. The replicated image is hours out of date. The DR runbook references infrastructure that no longer exists. What appeared to be protection on paper becomes reconstruction under pressure.

The cost is not just financial. It is also operational. One team manages backup windows. Another handles replication schedules. A third party tests DR failover once or twice a year, hoping that the test environment closely enough mirrors production to be effective. Coordination replaces automation. Manual validation replaces confidence.

Addressing Protection Fragmentation with the VMware Exit

A transition away from VMware touches every workload, every storage volume, and every network segment. It forces a complete inventory of what runs, where it runs, and how it connects. That same process creates an opportunity to eliminate the protection tax entirely.

The alternative is not just another backup product or replication tool. It is an architecture that integrates protection directly into the production environment. Instead of copying data out to separate systems, the modern infrastructure maintains continuous, deduplicated snapshots within the same layer that runs workloads. Recovery becomes a restart, not a rebuild.

Taking an infrastructure-wide approach to the exit eliminates the VMware protection problem, rather than recreating it. Gone are backup servers, replication appliances, and the storage arrays that support them. It removes the operational overhead of aligning schedules, policies, and retention across disconnected tools. Protection becomes automatic, continuous, and inherently consistent with the production state.

The financial impact is immediate. Removing 30 to 40 percent of infrastructure spend while improving recovery time and reliability is not incremental savings. It redefines the cost model.

Resilience Should Be Built In, Not Bolted On

VMware’s Protection Problem solved by VergeOS

VergeOS does not separate production from protection. It treats availability, recovery, and performance as interconnected components of a unified system, enabling the creation of an advanced data resilience strategy. Every write is captured, deduplicated, and mirrored. Snapshots are independent, instant, and retained for months without impacting capacity. Replication encompasses not only data but also the configuration and metadata required for seamless failover.

Disaster recovery stops being a separate plan and becomes a continuous operational state. Sites maintain synchronized copies of complete virtual data centers that can be activated elsewhere in minutes. Testing happens during production hours without risk. Failover and failback are automated, predictable, and repeatable. VergeOS unifies these layers through VergeFS’s ioClone snapshot technology for data protection, ioGuardian for hardware resilience, and ioReplicate with virtual data centers for site continuity.

This isn’t theory. It’s how infrastructure should work in a post-VMware world. The hypervisor transition is the perfect opportunity to eliminate the protection fragmentation that VMware created.

Eliminating Protection Fragmentation Delivers Confidence

The VMware Exit begins with a choice. Organizations can replicate the same fragmented protection model on new infrastructure, or they can rebuild resilience the right way. The first option preserves the VMware protection problem. The second eliminates it.

Integrated resilience delivers faster, works-the-first-time recovery, lowers cost, and simplifies operations. It removes the protection tax caused by protection fragmentation and replaces it with a foundation that supports broader modernization. Infrastructure consolidation becomes practical. VDI performance improves. Cloud repatriation makes financial sense. Private AI can run securely next to production data.

The first VMware payoff isn’t cheaper licensing—it’s confidence, achieved by eliminating protection fragmentation. Confidence that data will always be available, recoverable, and protected by the infrastructure itself. That foundation enables everything that follows: consolidation, VDI modernization, cloud repatriation, and Private AI.


Ready to rethink how protection works in a post-VMware environment?
Register for our live virtual chalktalk session, Beyond the Hypervisor Swap, on October 9th at 1:00 PM ET / 10:00 AM PT, to explore how integrated resilience eliminates backup complexity, reduces infrastructure costs by 30–40%, and delivers recovery times measured in minutes instead of hours.

Filed Under: Protection

October 7, 2025 by George Crump

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 7, 2025

Pfeiffer University Selects VergeIO to Replace VMware, Cutting IT Costs by 85%

Ann Arbor, MI — October 7, 2025 — VergeIO, the leading VMware alternative, today announced that Pfeiffer University, a private nonprofit liberal arts institution in North Carolina, has modernized its IT infrastructure with VergeOS. The transition reduced Pfeiffer’s infrastructure costs by approximately 85% while providing students with real-world learning opportunities.

Pfeiffer University, with over 135 years of history, is recognized for its personalized education and hands-on learning approach. When VMware licensing changes, rising costs, and poor support responsiveness threatened to overwhelm the small IT department, CIO Ryan Conte and his team began evaluating alternatives.

“VMware wasn’t calling us back,” said CIO Ryan Conte. “VergeOS was the only product I looked at that didn’t need hardware. Others told me to buy new, but I had good servers with life left in them. VergeOS, let me use them.”

VMware Challenges

VMware’s move to per-core subscriptions increased Pfeiffer’s projected costs to $35,000–$45,000 annually, compounded by the elimination of discounts offered to higher education institutions. In addition, MSPs pushed for hardware refreshes or cloud migrations that would have cost Pfeiffer $100,000 to $200,000, a significant capital expense for most private nonprofit institutions.

Why VergeIO

CIO Ryan Conte and his team evaluated public cloud services, scaled-down VMware approaches, and other on-premises platforms, but all fell short of expectations.

VergeIO stood out because it:

  • Supported reuse of HP Gen9/10/11 and Dell servers, allowing the university to repurpose existing equipment.
  • Combined virtualization, storage, networking, and data protection into a single platform.
  • Enabled in-house migration of 30–40 VMs without professional services.
  • Delivered built-in disaster recovery, replication, and ransomware protection, eliminating the need for a separate $20,000–$30,000 backup project.
  • Provided rapid support response times.

Three senior CIS students — Mathius Dessureau, Jason Giesbrecht, and Justin Giesbrecht — played a pivotal role in Pfeiffer’s transition from VMware to VergeOS. They conducted a comparative analysis, participated in the VergeOS proof of concept, and supported its implementation. Their contributions not only advanced the project but also reinforced Pfeiffer’s culture of hands-on learning, providing them with valuable real-world experience that will benefit their careers.

“Pfeiffer University’s project is a great example of how VergeOS empowers smaller IT teams to do more with less. By reusing hardware, integrating students into the process, and consolidating core IT functions, they achieved dramatic cost savings and improved resilience. This is exactly the kind of outcome VergeIO was designed to deliver,” said Jason Yaeger, SVP of Engineering, VergeIO.

Results

By adopting VergeOS, Pfeiffer avoided costly hardware refreshes, improved resiliency, and modernized its IT foundation. The project reduced projected infrastructure costs by 85% compared to VMware, aligning with the university’s mission to combine education with real-world experience.

The Pfeiffer journey away from VMware is documented in the case study here

About Pfeiffer University

Pfeiffer University is a private nonprofit liberal arts institution with campuses in Misenheimer, Charlotte, and Albemarle, North Carolina. With an 11:1 student-to-faculty ratio and a mission rooted in service and leadership, Pfeiffer combines academic rigor with practical experience to prepare students for success.

About VergeIO

VergeIO is the leading VMware alternative. Its product, VergeOS, is an ultraconverged infrastructure (UCI) platform that unifies virtualization, storage, networking, AI, and data protection into a single unified software codebase, running on commodity x86 hardware. Organizations use VergeOS to reduce costs, simplify operations, and ensure resiliency while avoiding vendor lock-in.

Media Contact:
Judy Smith, JPR Communications
[email protected]
818-522-9673

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: Alternative, Customer Success, VMware

September 24, 2025 by George Crump

Deduplication and RAM cache are two of the most critical technologies in modern IT infrastructure. Both are designed to improve efficiency and performance, but in storage-centric designs, they often work against each other. Deduplication reduces the amount of data that must be stored and transmitted, while cache accelerates access to frequently used data. The problem is that the way these features are typically implemented causes them to clash.

The effectiveness of cache depends on the location. When cache sits inside the server hosting the VM, it is directly alongside the application and delivers immediate performance benefits. When cache resides in a shared storage system connected over the network, its value is far less meaningful. From the application’s perspective, there is little difference between retrieving a block from the array’s cache and retrieving it from the array’s flash drives—both require a network hop.

Deduplication complicates this further. Before cached data can be sent from the storage system, it must often be rehydrated. This process eliminates much of the performance advantage that cache is supposed to provide.

Infrastructure-wide deduplication changes the deduplication and RAM cache dynamics. By sharing metadata across storage, virtualization, and networking layers, it ensures that deduplication and cache work together rather than in opposition. Cache remains in the right place—next to the VM—while data stays deduplicated until the moment it is consumed. For a deeper explanation of this concept, see the blog What Is Infrastructure-Wide Deduplication.

The Role of RAM Cache Today

RAM cache is one of the most powerful tools available for improving application performance. Because it operates at memory speeds, it delivers far lower latency than even the fastest flash storage. Modern workloads—including databases, analytics platforms, and AI/ML pipelines—depend on cache to meet user and business expectations for responsiveness.

But the effectiveness of cache is determined by its placement. Cache inside the server hosting the VM eliminates unnecessary trips across the network, delivering measurable and consistent benefits.

By contrast, cache located inside a shared storage system provides limited value. Retrieving a block from the storage array’s cache is not much different than retrieving it from the array’s SSD tier—both require a network hop. Worse, storage-centric deduplication forces cached data to be rehydrated before transmission, erasing the supposed advantage of having the block in cache at all.

The result is a gap between what cache should provide and what it actually delivers. As applications grow more cache-dependent, that gap widens, exposing the shortcomings of architectures that treat deduplication and cache as isolated features rather than complementary technologies.

How Storage-Centric Deduplication Undermines RAM Cache

deduplication and RAM cache

All-Flash Array vendors promote deduplication as a space-saving feature of their arrays. In theory, deduplication and RAM cache should complement each other; the smaller the dataset, the more effective the cache. In practice, the opposite occurs.

Deduplicated blocks inside an array must be rehydrated before they can be transmitted across the network to the VM. This means that even when a cache hit occurs, the system spends CPU cycles rebuilding the block before it can leave the array. The benefit of the cache hit is diminished, and the VM receives the data with little to no latency improvement.

From the application’s perspective, this creates an illusion of acceleration. The array may report cache efficiency, but because rehydration is required, the VM experiences almost the same delay it would if the block were read directly from flash. Customers end up buying expensive all-flash arrays with large caches that deliver almost no practical benefit to the workloads they are supposed to accelerate. This problem is explored further in AFA Deduplication vs vSAN, which highlights the compromises of storage-centric deduplication approaches.

This is not just a performance issue—it is a resource issue. Rehydration consumes CPU and memory resources in the storage system, forcing organizations to overprovision those resources just to keep workloads running. The result is higher cost, wasted infrastructure, and inconsistent performance.

Infrastructure-Wide Deduplication: The Metadata Advantage

The key to making deduplication and RAM cache work together is eliminating the need for rehydration until the very last step—when the data is delivered to the VM. This is possible only when deduplication metadata is shared across the entire infrastructure, rather than being locked inside a storage array.

deduplication and RAM cache

With infrastructure-wide deduplication, VergeOS maintains a single, global metadata structure that spans storage, virtualization, and networking. This ensures that data can remain deduplicated as it moves through the system. Blocks do not need to be reassembled or expanded in the storage system before traveling across the network. Instead, they stay in their deduplicated form until consumed by the VM or application.

This shift has a direct impact on cache strategy. Cache no longer needs to sit inside the storage system, where rehydration undermines its value. Instead, cache can be placed where it matters most—in the server, right next to the workload. By maintaining consistent deduplication awareness across all layers, cached blocks remain optimized and deliver real performance benefits without the overhead of premature rehydration.

In practice, this often improves effective cache hit rates by a factor of four to five compared to array-side caching, because server-side cache is no longer wasted storing redundant blocks. Applications see faster response times, more consistently low latency, and higher resource utilization efficiency.

Comparing Storage-Centric vs. Infrastructure-Wide Approaches

Feature / ImpactStorage-Centric Deduplication + CacheInfrastructure-Wide Deduplication + Cache
Cache LocationInside storage array, across networkInside server, next to VM
Rehydration RequirementBefore transmission, even from cacheOnly at VM, at point of use
Effective Cache Hit RateLow, due to redundant blocks + rehydration4–5x higher, dedupe shrinks working set
Latency ImprovementMinimal (network hop and rehydration erases benefit)Significant (direct from RAM cache to VM)
Resource OverheadHigh CPU/RAM in array for rehydrationLower overhead, fewer wasted cycles
Business Value DeliveredEfficiency for the array vendorEfficiency and performance for the business

The Deduplication and RAM cache Takeaway

Deduplication and RAM cache are both essential to modern infrastructure, but in storage-centric designs, they often work at cross purposes. Deduplication reduces storage requirements but forces rehydration, undermining cache. Storage-system caches sit on the far side of the network and provide little practical benefit to the applications that need them most.

Infrastructure-wide deduplication resolves this conflict. By sharing metadata across storage, virtualization, and networking, data remains deduplicated until the VM consumes it. Cache can be located directly in the server, where it accelerates workloads without the penalty of premature rehydration. Instead of competing for resources, deduplication and cache reinforce one another—smaller datasets, higher cache hit rates, and faster, more consistent application performance.

The distinction is clear. Storage deduplication and cache create efficiency for the array. Infrastructure-wide deduplication and cache create efficiency for the business—delivering responsiveness, reducing costs, and scaling with modern workloads like AI, analytics, and VDI that storage-centric models struggle to support. For a broader discussion of why deduplication must evolve, download the white paper Building Infrastructure on Integrated Deduplication.

Filed Under: Storage Tagged With: Cache, Deduplication, Storage

September 23, 2025 by George Crump

Modernizing VDI and infrastructure requires looking beyond silos. Too often, IT leaders view a VMware exit as a hypervisor issue alone or consider VDI in isolation as a desktop project. Both perspectives miss the larger opportunity. Rising costs, tighter licensing terms, and fragmented management show that desktops and infrastructure are inseparable parts of the same challenge.

Reconsidering VDI makes sense in this context. Compliance, ransomware, and AI data governance all drive the need for centralized desktops, but the real value comes when VDI is addressed as part of a broader consolidation effort. By unifying desktops, servers, storage, and networking, organizations cut costs, reduce operational drag, and prepare for a future where governance, resiliency, and private AI must be delivered from the same architecture.

VAR solution architects can guide IT professionals through this shift, reframing VDI not as an endpoint but as a catalyst for infrastructure-wide modernization.

VDI as the Pressure Point

VDI shows pain fast. It faces users directly. As a result, performance issues and rising costs draw attention quickly. Traditional platforms built on multiple consoles and back-end dependencies create complexity and inflate expense.

When IT teams move to replace VDI, they often uncover a larger problem: fragmentation across desktops, servers, storage, and networking. Treating VDI as a standalone issue only delays the modernization that consolidation delivers.

Reconsidering VDI in a Consolidation Strategy

Many organizations ruled out VDI years ago as too costly or complex. That decision fit the time, but conditions have shifted. In a broader modernization strategy, VDI deserves a second look.

Drivers now extend beyond cost. Compliance and security mandates demand stronger control over user access and data handling. Rising ransomware threats make centralized desktops with consistent protection more attractive than scattered endpoints. Emerging AI projects raise data sovereignty concerns. Training or prompting AI models with organizational data requires internal processing, not exposure to public cloud services.

Reintroducing VDI as part of infrastructure consolidation aligns user access with the same architecture that runs servers, storage, and networking. This approach simplifies security, strengthens compliance, and positions the organization for a future where governance and AI readiness intersect.

Fragmentation Drives Cost and Risk

Modernizing VDI and infrastructure

Running desktops, servers, storage, and networking as separate projects creates duplication and inefficiency. Each system brings its own licenses, contracts, and management tools. Vendors often trade blame during troubleshooting, slowing resolution.

Fragmentation inflates operating costs and drags IT response. The extra budget spent on silos becomes a “fragmentation tax” that drains resources from modernization projects.

Modernizing VDI and infrastructure as the Smarter Strategy

Modernizing VDI and infrastructure together eliminates the duplication and inefficiency that silos create. A unified platform removes overlapping systems, merges licensing into one model, and provides a single management plane for desktops, servers, storage, and networking.

Consolidation reduces software spend, shortens the learning curve for IT staff, and strengthens resiliency through integrated data protection. Organizations gain a simpler, more predictable environment that supports current workloads and prepares for private AI.

VAR solution architects expand their role with this strategy. The conversation shifts from tactical fixes to strategic modernization, creating larger opportunities and deeper customer relationships.

Fragmentation vs. Consolidation at a Glance

FactorFragmented InfrastructureConsolidated Infrastructure (VergeOS + Inuvika + Cirrus Data)
Licensing ModelPer-core, per-user, multiple vendor renewalsStraightforward per-server + concurrent-user licensing
Management4–6 consoles across desktops, servers, storage, networkingSingle management plane for desktops and infrastructure
Operational Overhead30–50% of IT time on troubleshooting and integrationReduced admin effort; IT focuses on strategic projects
Resiliency & ProtectionDisjointed backup and DR across silosIntegrated resiliency and protection across all workloads
Cost TrajectoryIncreasing 60% or more, year on yearPredictable costs with extended hardware lifecycles
Future Readiness (AI, etc.)Limited support; data risk in public cloudsBuilt-in private AI inferencing within secure infrastructure

Outcomes That Matter to Organizations

Modernizing VDI and infrastructure via consolidation delivers value across industries, even though each faces different pressures.

In education, universities have reduced “computer lab sprawl” by virtualizing applications and enabling student-device access, shrinking both the number and size of labs. The University of Massachusetts Lowell found utilization as low as 30% in some labs and cut costs by shifting to VDI (EdTech Magazine). Virtual desktops also lower maintenance and staffing needs while aligning licensing with fluctuating student populations.

In healthcare, enterprise VDI delivers 99.9% uptime for clinical desktops. Unified architectures prevent outages common in siloed hardware and provide secure, consistent access to patient data.

SMBs, caught between enterprise demands and enterprise pricing, are turning to consolidation. 95% of IT leaders plan vendor consolidation, with 80% citing the need to reduce point solutions (CIO). Companies that consolidate cut up to 20% of operational costs, extend hardware lifecycles, and simplify vendor management.

Across all sectors, modernizing VDI and infrastructure lowers cost, improves service delivery, and prepares IT for future projects.

Modernizing VDI and Infrastructure Inuvika, VergeIO, and Cirrus Data

Consolidation requires more than swapping point products. It demands platforms designed to unify. VergeOS provides that foundation by combining server virtualization, storage, networking, and resiliency in one code base. It replaces loosely integrated stacks with one consistent architecture and a straightforward licensing model. VergeOS licenses per server, regardless of CPUs or cores, giving organizations predictable costs as hardware evolves.

Modernizing VDI and infrastructure

Inuvika complements this foundation with a Linux-based VDI platform that eliminates Windows Server back ends. Its concurrent-user model fits actual usage patterns, and its lightweight footprint makes deployment simple.

VergeOS now integrates AI into the infrastructure. Organizations deliver full inferencing capabilities to virtual desktops while keeping data private. Industries with strict sovereignty requirements can run AI internally without exposure to external cloud services.

Cirrus Data extends the strategy with efficient data mobility. IT teams migrate workloads from multiple platforms into a VergeOS cluster without extended downtime or high risk. VAR solution architects present customers with a clear, practical path to unification instead of a disruptive overhaul.

Together, VergeIO, Inuvika, and Cirrus Data modernize VDI and infrastructure as part of one unified strategy. IT professionals replace fragmentation with a single architecture, simplify licensing, and prepare for secure AI adoption.

How Do You Know You’re Ready for Modernizing VDI and infrastructure at the Same Time?

Reintroducing or modernizing VDI often signals more than a desktop change. It marks a review of the entire infrastructure. The key question is whether the current environment can deliver desktops, workloads, and applications securely from one platform.

Clear signals include rising licensing costs, compliance demands that outpace endpoint controls, or ransomware exposing weaknesses in scattered systems. The growth of AI adds urgency, as private inferencing requires both secure VDI and integrated infrastructure.

VAR solution architects can use these questions to uncover fragmentation, and IT professionals can use them to assess readiness. In either case, the answer points to treating VDI as part of a wider consolidation plan.

Modernizing VDI and infrastructure: Readiness Assessment

Whether you’re looking to modernize existing VDI, exit current solutions, or reconsider VDI after dismissing it previously, these questions will help you determine if consolidation is the right strategy for your organization.

Current VDI Users – Should You Consolidate or Exit?

  • Are your VDI licensing costs increasing faster than your user growth?
  • Do you manage more than three separate platforms just to deliver desktops and applications?
  • Are you spending more than 30% of your IT time troubleshooting integration issues between VDI and infrastructure systems?
  • Has your current VDI vendor changed licensing terms or roadmap direction in ways that concern you?

Organizations Without VDI – Is It Time to Revisit?

  • Have compliance requirements (HIPAA, SOX, GDPR) become more stringent since you last evaluated VDI?
  • Are ransomware concerns highlighting the vulnerability of scattered endpoints across your organization?
  • Do you need to support AI initiatives while keeping organizational data internal and secure?
  • Are remote work demands outpacing what traditional endpoint management can deliver?

Universal Consolidation Readiness Indicators

  • Do you currently pay multiple vendors for infrastructure services (servers, storage, networking, desktops)?
  • Has your total IT licensing spend increased by more than 20% over the past two years without corresponding gains in capability?
  • Are you planning major infrastructure refresh cycles in the next 12–18 months?
  • Do different departments manage their own IT relationships, creating silos and duplicate spending?

If you answered “yes” to three or more questions in any category, infrastructure consolidation—with VDI as a catalyst—deserves serious consideration. The timing and technology landscape have likely shifted enough to make what seemed impractical before into a strategic advantage today.

Ready to see how these solutions would fit into your environment? Schedule a strategic planning session to walk through a virtual whiteboard overview, demonstrating how VergeOS, Inuvika, and Cirrus Data would modernize your infrastructure and deliver the benefits outlined in this post.

Register for the Infrastructure Masterclass

Thursday, September 25th delivers a two-part masterclass in consolidation with two VergeIO webinars built to give IT professionals and VAR solution architects a complete view of modernization. Together, they provide a buy-one-get-one-free opportunity to understand how desktops, workloads, and AI-ready infrastructure fit into a single strategy.

The first event is:

Infrastructure + VDI Replacement: The Complete Partner Opportunity
📅 Thursday, September 25, 2025
🕐 10:00 AM ET

This session targets VAR solution architects and shows how modernizing VDI and infrastructure can lower costs, strengthen security, and simplify operations. It will cover how to position modernization strategies, expand engagements, and grow recurring revenue. IT professionals are certainly welcome to attend and will gain insight into how desktops and infrastructure operate together in practice. The session also features CCSI, a cloud service provider running VergeOS and Inuvika in production, demonstrating their live environment and outcomes.

Later in the day, VergeIO will host:

After the VMware Exit – How to Consolidate, Repatriate, and Prepare for AI
📅 Thursday, September 25, 2025
🕐 1:00 PM ET

This session invites everyone, speaking to both IT professionals and VAR solution architects. It explains why only treating the VMware exit as a hypervisor swap creates sprawl and complexity. Experts will demonstrate how full consolidation, repatriation of workloads from a public cloud, and preparation of environments for private AI all integrate into a single strategy. Attendees will see how a universal migration path and a unified infrastructure platform cut costs, simplify operations, and prepare for the future.

Together, these two webinars provide the complete picture: desktops and applications in the first session, consolidation and AI readiness in the second. Attending both delivers unmatched guidance and real-world proof in one day.

Conclusion

IT professionals face pressures that extend across desktops and infrastructure. Rising costs, rigid licensing, compliance demands, and growing security threats all point to one issue: fragmentation. Treating VDI as an isolated project delays progress. The smarter move is to use VDI modernization as the catalyst for consolidation that unifies desktops, servers, storage, networking, and AI.

For IT professionals, consolidation creates a predictable, secure, and resilient environment that supports both current and future needs. For VAR solution architects, it creates opportunities to lead larger, more strategic engagements and replace transactional deals with long-term modernization plans.

Filed Under: VDI Tagged With: Alternative, IT infrastructure, VDI, VMware

September 22, 2025 by George Crump

As enterprises plan their VMware exit, one of the biggest risks is falling into the hypervisor sprawl trap. The hypervisor sprawl trap is the cycle where organizations replace VMware with multiple hypervisors or cloud services for specific use cases, creating fragmented operations, higher costs, and diluted expertise instead of true simplification.

Learn How to Escape the Trap

The reality is that many enterprises run more than one hypervisor, even more if you factor in public cloud use. This mix is manageable for now, but Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware is forcing more organizations to reevaluate their strategies. If the response is treated as a quick hypervisor swap, it may potentially lead to the addition of more hypervisors.

The wiser course is to view the VMware transition as an opportunity to simplify complexity. The goal should not be a one-for-one hypervisor trade but the adoption of a unified infrastructure platform that integrates virtualization, storage, networking, and protection. A single operating model reduces cost, simplifies operations, and creates a foundation for private AI.

How the Hypervisor Sprawl Trap is Sprung

The hypervisor sprawl trap rarely arrives in one step. It builds in layers.

  • The core data center adopts a hypervisor because it is less expensive than VMware and has near feature parity.
  • Edge and ROBO groups want to adopt lightweight KVM builds for small deployments because the core selection is too “heavy.”
  • AI teams want to experiment with GPU-focused variants because the core selection has weak or expensive GPU support.
  • Business Unit Managers approve cloud migrations to speed the deployment of new applications because the core selection is too complex.

Each decision makes sense individually, but together they create a fractured environment that is harder to manage and more expensive to run.

The Cost of The Hypervisor Sprawl Trap

The first phase of the hypervisor sprawl trap can appear to save money. A “free” hypervisor delays a license renewal. A cloud migration shifts capital expense into operating expense. Those savings are short-lived, and the cost of falling into the hypervisor sprawl trap soon becomes obvious. Each new hypervisor introduces its own patch cycle, interface, and failure model. Training grows broader, but skills become shallow. Monitoring, backup, and automation tools multiply. Disaster recovery plans diverge, and testing becomes longer and less predictable.

The use of the Cloud compounds the hypervisor sprawl trap. Lift-and-shift projects rarely eliminate on-premises complexity. They add monthly expenses and force IT to maintain separate operational silos. Edge and ROBO hypervisors create their own islands of management. Instead of simplifying the environment, sprawl increases both direct cost and hidden overhead.

Over five years, the total cost of a hypervisor swap mentality can exceed even VMware’s high licensing costs while leaving IT with weaker recovery capabilities and higher operational risk.

The Better Path: Infrastructure Consolidation

Broadcom’s actions are a forcing function. Enterprises can either fall into the hypervisor sprawl trap or set a clearer goal. The right objective is complete consolidation under one infrastructure-wide operating model that spans the core data center, private AI, edge, venues, and remote offices. Storage, networking, and protection must be part of that model.

A single infrastructure platform restores consistency. Incident response improves when all workloads are managed through one console. Disaster recovery becomes more reliable when there is one failover pattern. Compliance checks are faster when policies are enforced consistently across the environment. Teams deepen their expertise because they are not spread across competing tools. Cloud use becomes tactical and deliberate rather than a default escape from licensing costs.

Start with a Universal Migration Capability

Migration from VMware, Hyper-V, KVM variants, and cloud instances should be part of IT’s core capabilities, not added later. The majority of enterprises are living with degrees of fragmentation. The right move is to reverse it.

The Hypervisor Sprawl Trap

A universal migration tool makes this process a repeatable practice for IT. Platforms such as Cirrus Data provide the ability to move workloads from VMware, Hyper-V, KVM variants, and public cloud with minimal disruption, which is the first step in avoiding the hypervisor sprawl trap. They manage bandwidth, schedule cutovers, and create audit trails. With tools like these, migration becomes a permanent capability rather than a special project, making it possible to unwind sprawl when it begins to form.

Plan a series of consolidation waves. Begin with workloads that are lower risk but generate high administrative costs. Use them to prove migration and rollback processes, and to refine team procedures. With each wave, expand to higher-value workloads and remove duplicate tools. Cloud workloads should be treated with the same rigor. SaaS adoption will remain, but many lift-and-shift VMs are better brought back into the consolidated platform when contract terms permit.

A universal migration capability is essential because consolidation only works when migrations can move workloads into the chosen destination platform quickly, safely, and at scale.

VergeOS: The Universal Destination

As migration tools provide the means to reverse the hypervisor sprawl trap, so VergeOS provides the destination. The majority of VMware alternatives re-package KVM and expect IT to fill the gaps. Although VergeOS is KVM-based, it removes those gaps by going a step further and integrating virtualization (VergeHV), storage (VergeFS), networking (VergeFabric), and AI (VergeIQ) into a unified code base. The result is a hardware-neutral, efficient, high performance environment designed to extend the life of current hardware while increasing selection flexibility in the future.

hypervisor sprawl trap

Workloads from VMware, Hyper-V, KVM distributions, and cloud services can all be hosted on the same platform. Management takes place through one interface. Data reduction is applied across the stack, cutting I/O and bandwidth. High availability, immutable recovery points, and consistent networking policies are built into the software.

Together, Cirrus Data provides the universal migration capability, and VergeOS delivers the unified destination. This combination makes it possible to eliminate sprawl permanently rather than only trading one hypervisor for another.

To see this partnership in action register for our live webinar “After the VMware Exit: How to Consolidate, Repatriate, and Prepare for AI.”

The result is true infrastructure consolidation. One operating model spans the data center, edge, AI, venues, and remote offices. Teams train on one system, gaining depth instead of spreading thin. Costs track with hardware rather than feature packs or add-ons. VergeOS turns the VMware transition into a permanent infrastructure upgrade rather than a short-term trade.

Escaping The Hypervisor Sprawl Trap Permanently

Enterprises operate with more than one hypervisor, and the VMware disruption threatens to expand that sprawl. Deploying different hypervisors for edge, AI, and ROBO workloads increases complexity, and cloud lift-and-shift projects make the problem worse. The better answer is infrastructure consolidation. A universal migration tool, such as Cirrus Data, provides the means, and VergeOS provides the destination.

Enterprises should resist the temptation to treat the VMware exit as only a hypervisor swap and instead look for a unified infrastructure-wide operating platform. The outcome is lower cost, stronger expertise, and a single platform ready to support the next generation of workloads, including private AI. After the VMware exit, the goal is not to manage sprawl. The goal is to eliminate it.

The choice is clear: consolidate now with a universal migration path and a unified infrastructure platform, or carry the cost of sprawl into the future. Schedule a technical whiteboard session to dive deep into the VergeOS architecture.

Filed Under: VMwareExit Tagged With: IT infrastructure, VMware

September 17, 2025 by George Crump

What comes after the VMware exit matters more than what you leave behind. Don’t replace VMware with Nutanix, or Hyper-V, or the hypervisor du jour, and declare the problem solved. That approach misses the real opportunity. The VMware exit served as the compelling event that enterprises needed to finally consolidate years of tactical decisions, which had built silos across the data center, edge, and cloud, leaving them ill-prepared for future workloads.

Most enterprises already run multiple hypervisors. VMware sits at the core, but Hyper-V handles Windows-centric applications. Nutanix crept in through departmental projects. Edge sites run different stacks. Cloud platforms host workloads that were meant to be temporary but never came back. Swapping VMware for another hypervisor leaves this mess intact.

Register Now

The right move is to use this disruption to drive complete consolidation. One operating model must span the data center, edge, ROBO, and venues. One platform must handle virtual machines, containers, AI workloads, backup, and disaster recovery. Anything less retains the same fragmented complexity, albeit under a different label.

The path forward is clear. Enterprises must modernize on-premises infrastructure to consolidate silos, pull back workloads that never belonged in the cloud, and build a platform ready to run AI alongside every other workload. Anything less leaves IT repeating the same cycle of sprawl under new names.

After The VMware Exit, Modernize Infrastructure

After the VMware exit modernize infrastructure

After the VMware exit the goal should be complete consolidation of the infrastructure. Consolidation starts with modernization, but not the kind most vendors sell. Too often, “modernization” is a rebrand of the same fragmentation—another hypervisor, another storage system, another management console. Real modernization means collapsing silos into a single operating model, extending the useful life of hardware, and giving IT the agility to run any workload on a standard foundation.

Modernization done right reduces the number of moving parts, stretches servers and storage to five or seven years instead of three or four, and creates a single system capable of supporting virtual machines, containers, and AI workloads without building separate stacks. The VMware exit is the moment to stop layering tactical fixes and start building a strategic, consolidated platform that lasts.

After The VMware Exit, Repatriate the Cloud

After the VMware exit repatriate cloud workloads

Another step after the VMware exit is cloud repatriation, which involves consolidating on-premises resources and pulling back workloads that should never have been moved to the cloud in the first place. The public cloud provided quick relief when IT needed capacity fast, but many of those temporary moves became permanent. Enterprises now pay unpredictable monthly bills for capacity they could run more consistently and economically on infrastructure they already own.

Those costs rise every quarter, driven by storage growth, variable I/O performance, and punitive egress charges. The fix is repatriation. Pull back the steady-state workloads—databases, file services, ERP systems, and VDI—that run better under direct control. Keep the cloud for temporal workloads where its economics make sense. Renting a car for a trip is practical. Renting one every day for your daily commute is reckless. The same logic should be applied to cloud consumption.

AI makes the case even stronger. Training and inference create data gravity that punishes cloud economics. Large and growing datasets need to sit close to the GPU and compute resources. Moving them back and forth only adds cost and latency. Repatriation is not just about saving money. It is about putting the right workloads in the right place and preparing the enterprise for AI.

After The VMware Exit, Prepare for Private AI

Another step after the VMware exit is preparing infrastructure to run AI as a core function, not as an afterthought. AI is no longer experimental, and it cannot be treated as a side project or pushed into the cloud as a service. The datasets that feed AI are the most valuable assets enterprises own. Sending them to a public cloud raises sovereignty concerns, exposes sensitive data, and locks the enterprise into consumption models that only grow more expensive.

After the VMware exit prepare for AI

Cloud-based AI also adds token costs that accumulate with every transaction. What begins as a pilot quickly becomes an unpredictable monthly bill. Treating AI this way repeats the same mistakes that left steady-state workloads stranded in the cloud.

The right move is to make AI a first-class citizen in the same operating system that runs virtual machines, databases, and desktops. GPU pooling, high-throughput storage, and predictable networking must be built into the core platform, not added later as separate stacks. Vendors eager to sell AI-only servers and storage will lead enterprises straight into another silo. Building AI into the unified infrastructure from the start prevents this and keeps the estate ready for tomorrow’s demands.

What’s Required for Complete Consolidation

Modernizing on-premises, repatriating the right workloads, and preparing for AI all point to the same conclusion: consolidation only works if the foundation is built right. Enterprises can’t afford to solve one problem only to create another. To break the cycle of sprawl, two non-negotiable capabilities are required. Miss either, and the silos return under a new set of logos.

The first requirement is a universal infrastructure operating system. It must integrate virtualization, storage, networking, GPUs, backup, and disaster recovery into a single code base. One policy model must stretch from the data center to the edge, ROBO, and venues. The operating system must run on a wide range of x86 servers so organizations can reuse hardware during transitions and extend refresh cycles to five or seven years instead of three. Licensing must be per server, not per core or per socket. The platform must treat AI as a core workload with GPU pooling, high-throughput storage, and predictable networking built into the design.

The second requirement is a universal migration path. The path must cover VMware, Hyper-V, Nutanix, OpenStack, and workloads sitting in a public cloud. It must synchronize data while production continues to run and cut over in minutes. It must scale through automation, with migration-as-code recipes that standardize each step and log every action for audit. Without this path, consolidation remains an idea on paper, not a result in production.

To learn more about complete consolidation, register for our live webinar, “After the VMware Exit—How to Consolidate, Repatriate, and Prepare for AI”

The Requirement: Universal Path + Destination

Consolidation only succeeds when both requirements are met: the path to move workloads and the destination where they land. One without the other leaves IT stuck with the same problems under different branding.

Cirrus Data provides the path. Its block-level migration runs while production stays online. Intelligent QoS manages I/O so applications remain responsive during synchronization. Cutovers take minutes, not hours, making migrations fit inside standard change windows. With MigrateOps, migrations become recipes—repeatable, auditable, and consistent across hundreds of workloads. Migration risk, once the barrier to change, is removed.

VergeOS provides the destination. It is a single operating system that unifies virtualization, storage, networking, GPU sharing, backup, and disaster recovery. VergeOS runs on standard x86 servers and uses per-server licensing, so enterprises can extend hardware life and deploy large hosts without penalty. Most importantly, VergeOS treats AI as a core workload. GPU pooling, high-throughput storage, and predictable networking are built in, preventing the creation of yet another silo.

Together, Cirrus Data and VergeOS address both sides of the consolidation equation. Cirrus Data clears the way out of sprawl. VergeOS delivers a consistent operating model across the data center, edge, ROBO, and venues. Unlike other platforms that claim unification, VergeOS is built on a single code base—a distinction that makes a difference when stability and scale matter.

Why a Single Code Base Matters

Not every platform that calls itself “unified” deserves the label. Most competitors stitch together a collection of modules written by separate development teams, often acquired through M&A, and then shoehorn them into a common management GUI. The interface hides the seams but does not remove them. Each module carries its own dependencies, update cycles, and failure modes. When workloads push the system, those seams show up in outages, support escalations, and stalled upgrades.

A true universal infrastructure operating system is different. Built on a single code base, VergeOS delivers compute, storage, networking, GPU support, backup, and disaster recovery through the same logic and policy framework. Features work together because they were designed together. One update applies across the platform. One roadmap drives progress. One support model resolves issues without finger-pointing.

The difference matters. Layered modules behind a GUI add fragility that IT pays for later. A single code base gives enterprises confidence that every workload—traditional applications, cloud-repatriated systems, and private AI—runs on the same consistent foundation. Anything less is not consolidation. It is simply sprawl wearing a new logo.

Conclusion

The VMware exit is not just a licensing shift. It is the compelling event that enterprises need, to confront the cost and complexity created by years of tactical decisions. Treating it as a hypervisor swap misses the point. Replacing VMware with another logo keeps the same fragmentation in place and leaves the enterprise just as unprepared for AI, cloud repatriation, and future workloads.

The right move after the VMware exit is complete consolidation. That requires both a universal migration path and a universal infrastructure operating system. Cirrus Data provides the path, with live block-level migration, automation through MigrateOps, and cutovers measured in minutes. VergeOS provides the destination, with a single code base that unifies compute, storage, networking, GPU sharing, backup, and disaster recovery. Together, they address the two most critical questions following the VMware exit: how to escape sprawl and where to land once you do.

This is not the time to patch or postpone. Enterprises that seize the moment can consolidate once, extend hardware life, and prepare their infrastructure for AI without creating new silos. Enterprises that miss it will be back in the same place in three years—only weaker and even less ready. The choice is clear: consolidate now with Cirrus Data and VergeOS, or carry the weight of sprawl into the future.

Filed Under: VMwareExit Tagged With: Alternative, IT infrastructure, VMware

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