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      • Using Infrastructure to Prepare for RansomwareMost data centers still react to ransomware through backup, and the recovery gap costs them days. Using infrastructure to prepare for ransomware changes the posture. VergeOS contains attacks inside a VDC, holds clean immutable snapshots, detects encryption in the storage layer within minutes, and recovers the data center, not one VM.
      • How an AI-Powered VMware Alternative WorksAn AI-powered VMware alternative now runs in production. Verge CLI gives VergeOS three parts, a command-line interface, an MCP server, and agent skills, so an AI assistant operates compute, storage, networking, and data protection through one API in plain language. See how it works and why one code base changes the result.
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George Crump

July 7, 2026 by George Crump

Zia Yusuf spent his career building the partner ecosystems that carry infrastructure to market. On July 7, 2026, he invested in VergeIO and joined its board, the latest and most telling example of VMware executives joining VergeIO. He is not the first. Five weeks earlier, VMware’s former Chief Technology Officer made the same move. The pattern is now hard to miss, and Yusuf’s decision explains what it means for the partners and customers leaving VMware behind.

Key Takeaways
  • Zia Yusuf, former SVP of Strategic Ecosystem and Industry Solutions at VMware, invested in VergeIO and joined its board to help build the go-to-market and partner strategy.
  • He is the second senior VMware leader to join in weeks, after former CTO Kit Colbert. One built the ecosystem, the other set the technology.
  • The common thread is the private cloud operating system, a single codebase that replaces the four-vendor virtualization stack.

The Leader Who Built VMware’s Partner Engine

Zia Yusuf, the latest of the VMware executives joining VergeIO

Zia Yusuf, Board Member & Investor, VergeIO.

Yusuf led VMware’s Strategic Ecosystem and Industry Solutions organization from 2021 to 2024. His teams built the joint solutions and partner programs that carried VMware to market through Dell, the hyperscalers, system integrators, independent software vendors, and OEMs. Before VMware, he ran the global partner group at SAP, a network of more than 7,000 partners, and earlier advised technology companies on go-to-market as a Senior Partner at Boston Consulting Group. Few people have spent more time inside the machinery that takes enterprise infrastructure to the customer.

That background is the reason his move matters. Yusuf now advises the VergeIO board on go-to-market and partner ecosystem strategy, and his read on VergeOS is a market one. Partners can build a durable business on a single platform that lowers the customer’s total cost of ownership. “The signal I look for is an architecture that gives partners something durable to sell,” Yusuf said. VergeOS is that architecture, and he joined to build the route it takes to reach the customer.

Key Terms

Private cloud operating system (PCOS). A single operating system that runs virtualization, storage, networking, and tenancy as native functions from a single codebase, rather than four separate products behind a single management screen. It delivers the promise of Private Cloud to the enterprise.

The hypervisor tax. Each layer of the stack consumes memory and CPU, resources that cost more than ever. Every core and gigabyte the infrastructure takes for itself is one the virtual machines do not get, so customers overprovision their hardware to leave enough headroom for their applications.

Why a Partner Leader Sees an Opening Now

Live Webinar · July 16
Life After VMware: The Reseller Playbook for What Comes Next
Zia Yusuf and VergeIO SVP of Sales Chris Lehman map the reseller, strategic partner, and ecosystem strategy for the market VMware left behind.
Save Your Seat →

Yusuf is reading a market in motion. Broadcom’s changes to the VMware partner program moved the channel to an invitation-only model and left many established resellers without a flagship platform to recommend. Broadcom has narrowed its focus to its largest accounts, and the broader base of customers and the partners who serve them now rank as a lower priority. That underserved majority is the opening. Those customers turn to their partners for guidance, looking for infrastructure that costs less, does more today, and carries them into AI workloads tomorrow. A leader who built the partner side of VMware now points that community to the answer.

The Precedent: Kit Colbert

VergeOS runs traditional VMs and AI workloads from a single codebase

One codebase for today’s VMs and tomorrow’s AI workloads.

Yusuf is the second VMware leader to back VergeIO in weeks. On June 2, Kit Colbert, VMware’s former Chief Technology Officer, invested and joined the board. Colbert set VMware’s technical direction for two decades and led 2,400 engineers until Broadcom’s 2023 acquisition. Where Yusuf judged the route to market, Colbert judged the technology, and he reached the same conclusion about the architecture. Two leaders, two seats, one verdict.

What the Pattern of VMware Executives Joining VergeIO Means

The exit from VMware is not a swap of one hypervisor for another. It is a move to a private cloud operating system, a single codebase ready for the container and AI workloads that come next. The ecosystem builder and the technologist looked at the same company from different seats and agreed.

LeaderRole at VMwareWhat the investment validates
Zia YusufSVP, Strategic Ecosystem and Industry Solutions, 2021 to 2024The route to market. Partners can build a lasting business on the platform.
Kit ColbertChief Technology Officer, 2021 to 2023The architecture. A single codebase beats four products stitched behind a GUI.

The Verdict

Zia Yusuf built the partner side of one of the largest infrastructure companies in the industry, and he chose to put his money and his name behind VergeIO. Kit Colbert reached the same place from the engineering side. That agreement, from two people who know exactly how VMware worked, is the reason the pattern matters.

Read the announcements and hear the strategy firsthand:

  • Former VMware Ecosystem Leader Zia Yusuf Joins Board of Directors and Invests in VergeIO
  • Former VMware CTO Kit Colbert Invests in VergeIO and Joins Board of Directors
  • Register for the live webinar, Life After VMware: The Reseller Playbook for What Comes Next

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Zia Yusuf?

He led VMware’s Strategic Ecosystem and Industry Solutions organization from 2021 to 2024 and ran the global partner group at SAP before that. He now advises the VergeIO board on go-to-market and partner ecosystem strategy.

Did he invest his own money?

Yes. Yusuf invested in VergeIO and joined its Board of Directors, as did former VMware CTO Kit Colbert weeks earlier.

What is VergeOS?

VergeOS is a private cloud operating system. It runs virtualization, storage, networking, and tenancy as functions of one operating system, written from a single codebase.

Where can I hear more?

Zia Yusuf and VergeIO SVP of Sales Chris Lehman host a live webinar on July 16, 2026. Registration is open now.

Filed Under: VMwareExit

July 7, 2026 by George Crump

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE · ANN ARBOR, MICH. · July 7, 2026
Zia Yusuf
Zia Yusuf
Board Member & Investor, VergeIO
Former SVP, Strategic Ecosystem & Industry Solutions, VMware

VergeIO, developer of the VergeOS private cloud operating system, today announced that Zia Yusuf has invested in the company and joined its Board of Directors, where he will advise on go-to-market and partner ecosystem strategy. Yusuf served as Senior Vice President of Strategic Ecosystem and Industry Solutions at VMware from 2021 to 2024. His arrival signals where the market is heading for the resellers and strategic partners whose customers now ask them what to run after VMware.

Organizations want more from their infrastructure today and a platform ready for the workloads coming next, including AI. VergeOS answers both from one operating system. With virtualization, storage, and networking sharing a single code base, data stays local to the compute that uses it, and AI and GPU workloads scale without bolting on a separate storage or network stack. That architecture gives partners something they can stand behind.

A Career Building Enterprise Ecosystems and Go-To-Market

A Leader Who Built the Partner Side of the Industry

Yusuf led VMware’s Strategic Ecosystem and Industry Solutions organization from 2021 to 2024. His teams built joint horizontal and industry solutions with Dell, the global hyperscalers, system integrators, independent software vendors, and OEMs. Before VMware, he spent six years as a Senior Partner and Managing Director at Boston Consulting Group, where he opened the firm’s Silicon Valley office and advised technology companies on competitive strategy, go-to-market, and ecosystem and partner strategy. Earlier he ran the global ecosystem and partner group at SAP, a network of more than 7,000 partners, and served as CEO of the IoT company Streetline. He began his career at Goldman Sachs and the World Bank and was also an Entrepreneur-in-Residence at Sutter Hill Ventures and Norwest Venture Partners.

A Platform Partners Can Build a Business On

One Operating System, Not Four Products

A traditional VMware environment stacks a hypervisor from one vendor, storage from a second, networking from a third, and a management plane from a fourth. Each layer carries its own license, update cycle, and support contract. VergeOS replaces all four with one operating system, written from a single code base, where virtualization, storage, networking, and tenancy run as native functions.

For partners, that design changes the economics. One platform means fewer products to source, fewer integrations to maintain, and a lower total cost of ownership to bring to a customer. That cost advantage is a wedge, a concrete reason to displace an expensive incumbent and win the account rather than defend it. It also gives partners a straight answer when a customer asks what to run next. A leader who built the partner motion at VMware’s scale now sees that value in VergeIO.

Zia built the partner ecosystem for one of the largest infrastructure companies in the world. He knows what partners need to grow. Their customers are asking them what to run next, and they want infrastructure that does more today and is ready for AI tomorrow. Zia’s decision to invest and join our board tells that community where the market is heading.

Yan Ness, CEO of VergeIO

I spent my career building the partnerships and ecosystems that carry technology to market. The signal I look for is an architecture that gives partners something durable to sell. Customers want more from their infrastructure now, and a platform ready for AI and the workloads that follow. One operating system built from a single code base delivers both, and it gives partners a margin structure and a differentiation that a stack of assembled products cannot match. I invested and joined the board to help build the go-to-market motion that matches the technology.

Zia Yusuf, Member of the VergeIO Board of Directors
Why This Matters Now

The Channel’s Opening After VMware

VergeIO earned a DCIG Top 5 VMware Alternative rating in both the SME and SLED categories for two years running. That recognition arrives as Broadcom reshapes the market around it. Broadcom’s 2024 partner-program changes moved the channel to an invitation-only model and left many established resellers without a flagship platform to recommend, and its 2026 licensing terms now push existing VMware customers toward VCF or VVF before their contracts expire.

Broadcom has also narrowed its focus to its largest accounts, and the broader base of customers and the partners who serve them now rank as a lower priority. That underserved majority is the channel’s opening. Those customers turn to their partners for guidance, looking for infrastructure that costs less, does more today, and carries them into AI workloads tomorrow. Yusuf’s move points the reseller and strategic partner community to the answer.

Top 5
DCIG VMware Alternative rating
2 yrs
Running, SME and SLED categories
1
Code base replacing four products

Hear the Strategy Firsthand

Yusuf and Chris Lehman, SVP of Sales at VergeIO, discuss this shift in a live webinar, Life After VMware: The Reseller Playbook for What Comes Next, on July 16, 2026 at 12:00 PM ET. The session maps the reseller, strategic partner, and ecosystem strategy for the market VMware left behind, and gives partners a way to lead customer conversations with return on investment and lower total cost of ownership.

Register for the Webinar Read the Blog

About VergeIO

VergeIO develops VergeOS, the private cloud operating system that runs virtualization, storage, networking, and tenancy as functions of one operating system, written from a single code base. Customers deploy VergeOS to replace legacy virtualization stacks, remove compounding licensing layers, and run modern workloads, including AI, on infrastructure they already own. The company is headquartered in Ann Arbor, Michigan and serves enterprise, government, and service-provider customers worldwide. For more information, visit verge.io.

###

Filed Under: Press Release

June 24, 2026 by George Crump

Preparing your infrastructure for ransomware is an architecture decision you make before the attack, not a scramble you survive during it.

Using infrastructure to prepare for ransomware is a different posture than the one most data centers run today. The common model assumes the team will perform perfectly under pressure, at 3 a.m., with executives on the phone and a ransom clock running. The future asks for something steadier. It asks for ransomware-ready infrastructure, built in advance to both defend against an attack and recover from one, rather than the familiar scramble that starts only after the damage is done.

10–15 minFrom encryption to alert, inside the storage layer
~6 daysTypical attacker dwell time you cut short
MinutesBack to a clean data center, not days
100%DR test success rate with the VDC model
Key Takeaways
  • Preparation beats reaction. Infrastructure built to contain and recover from ransomware turns the attack into a drill you have already run.
  • VDC isolation, immutable snapshots, ioGuardian, and off site replication stack protection on the platform instead of outside it.
  • ioFortify detects the attack inside the storage layer in 10 to 15 minutes, well within the roughly six day attacker dwell window.

Today, most data centers depend almost entirely on their backup infrastructure to recover from ransomware. That dependence is the weak point. Three years ago I made the case that ransomware is an infrastructure problem, not a data problem, and recovery is where that point becomes hardest to ignore. Ransomware-ready infrastructure works the other way. It is proactive. It uses virtual data centers, or VDCs, to isolate the blast radius of an attack. It provides protection on the platform instead of outsourcing recovery to a separate backup application. It stacks multiple layers of data availability and recoverability under the workloads it runs.

Key Terms
Virtual Data Center (VDC)
A self contained environment with its own compute, networking, storage, and access controls. Isolation holds an attack to the VDC it enters.
ioClone
Read only snapshots at the instance, VDC, or VM level, taken as often as every 10 to 15 minutes. Set the snapshots that anchor recovery to immutable and give them a retention window.
ioFortify
Storage layer detection that flags the deduplication anomaly created by encryption, alerting within 10 to 15 minutes.
ioGuardian
Near continuous protection that keeps VMs running through multiple simultaneous drive or server failures.
ioReplicate
Three click, WAN aware, deduplicated replication of an entire VDC to a remote VergeOS instance.
Defense in Depth, Built In
Five layers of a ransomware-ready infrastructure, each one already in place before an attack.
1
Isolation. Each VDC contains the blast radius by default.
2
Rehearsal. Clone the full data center and drill recovery with no risk to production.
3
Immutable snapshots. Read only by default, immutable with retention for the copies that anchor recovery.
4
ioGuardian. Keeps VMs running through failures, and stands behind the snapshot layer itself.
5
Off-site DR. ioReplicate recovers an entire VDC to a remote VergeOS instance.

The Real Cost of Reacting to Ransomware Instead of Preparing Your Infrastructure

The reactive backup-first recovery model that using infrastructure to prepare for ransomware replaces

The trouble with the backup-first model is location. Most backup systems do not live inside the production infrastructure. They live outside it. The most recent backup is already hours, sometimes days, old, and by definition it has to travel back from the backup system to production before anything runs again. The cost is time.

A data loss window opens between the last good backup and the moment recovery completes. Part of that window is nothing more than the time it takes to move backup data across to the production side. Ransomware rarely takes just a few files. It takes thousands of files across multiple servers, which stretches every one of those minutes into hours. Preparation closes the gap by keeping protection and recovery on the same platform as the workloads.

Prepare Your Infrastructure to Contain Ransomware

Preparation begins with containment. In most environments the blast radius of an attack depends on firewall rules and segmentation that someone maintains by hand. That work is rarely complete, and it is almost never tested at the moment it matters.

Using infrastructure to prepare for ransomware by isolating an attack inside a single virtual data center

VergeOS takes a different path. Each virtual data center is a self contained environment with its own compute, networking, storage, and access controls. Ransomware that enters one VDC stays in that VDC. The containment is the default behavior of the platform, in force today, before any alert fires. You do not assemble it during the incident. It is already there.

Two patterns show how this works in practice. A cloud service provider can build a virtual data center for each customer. One tenant hit with ransomware stays sealed inside that tenant, with no path into the others sharing the platform. The same model works inside the enterprise. A team can separate mission critical data, business critical data, and user applications into their own virtual data centers. An infection in the user application VDC finds no route into the systems that run the business.

Rehearse Ransomware Recovery Before You Need It

A plan you have never run is a guess. The teams that recover fastest are the ones that have practiced, and most infrastructure makes practice expensive or risky. Standing up a copy of production usually means new hardware, long copy windows, and a real chance of disrupting the systems you depend on.

Rehearsing recovery on a cloned data center, part of using infrastructure to prepare for ransomware

VergeOS removes that friction. A single clone command stands up an isolated, space efficient copy of an entire VDC. The copy runs independent from production, so teams test patches, validate recovery steps, and walk the full response without touching live workloads. Honeypots and decoy targets add another rehearsal tool. They confirm that defenses fire and that recovery works before a real attacker tests them for you. Run the drill on a schedule. The first time you execute the recovery workflow should not be the day you are under attack.

The scope of that copy is what makes the drill honest. You are not testing recovery against a single VM pulled out of context. You are testing it against a faithful, isolated clone of the entire data center, with every workload, network, and dependency in place. That fidelity gives the team a true feel for how an attack moves and how recovery plays out, before either one happens for real.

Set the Right Snapshots to Immutable

Recovery depends on a clean copy the attacker cannot reach. VergeOS captures that copy with ioClone, which pairs a blockchain inspired file system inside VergeFS with global inline deduplication. The result is an instant, independent, space efficient snapshot, taken at the level the situation calls for. VergeOS snapshots the entire instance, a single virtual data center, or an individual VM. A coarser snapshot drills into its contents, so an instance level snapshot can extract one VDC or one VM when recovery needs a single piece.

Read-only and immutable snapshots, a core layer of using infrastructure to prepare for ransomware

Every snapshot is read only by default, so nothing in the running environment alters it. From there you set the snapshots that matter for recovery to immutable. Ransomware cannot encrypt or delete an immutable snapshot. VergeOS takes snapshots as often as every 10 to 15 minutes, retains them as long as you need, and places effectively no limit on their count. That cadence compresses the recovery point from hours down to minutes.

The discipline that matters is retention. Set retention times on your immutable snapshots so a portion of them survives an attacker who gains system access and starts deleting snapshots. An immutable snapshot under retention holds until its window expires, even against someone with administrative control. That guarantee is the difference between a snapshot you hope is there and one you know is there.

Add Layers Below the Snapshot

Snapshots defend against encryption. Hardware fails for its own reasons, often at the worst time, and a ransomware event can strike during a drive or node failure. ioGuardian covers that ground. It provides near continuous data protection that keeps VMs running through multiple simultaneous drive or server failures, with a recovery point measured in minutes rather than hours.

ioGuardian also stands behind the snapshots themselves. If an attacker compromises snapshot retention, it gives you a separate recovery path that does not depend on those snapshots. It is the layer that keeps the environment available when more than one thing breaks at once.

Extend Protection Off Site

A site wide event calls for a copy somewhere else. ioReplicate delivers three click recovery of an entire VDC, including its VMs, networking, and storage, to a remote VergeOS instance. Replication runs asynchronously, adapts to WAN conditions, and moves only deduplicated data, so it stays practical across real network links. The proof is in the testing. Customers report a 100 percent DR test success rate with the VDC model, and the tests run in under an hour. Off site protection you can actually test is the layer that survives the loss of a whole location.

Reactive Versus Prepared

The difference between the two postures is not effort during the attack. It is the work the infrastructure did to prepare for ransomware before it. The table below sets the common reactive defaults against what VergeOS has standing by the time an attacker shows up.

DimensionReactive defaultPrepared with VergeOS
Blast radiusHand maintained firewall rules, rarely testedVDC isolation, on by default
Recovery practiceRare, needs spare hardwareClone a full VDC, rehearse with no risk
Recovery pointHours between protection eventsRead only snapshots every 10 to 15 minutes
DetectionEndpoint or log tooling, hours to flagStorage layer signature in 10 to 15 minutes
Recovery methodRestore from backup, rebuild per VMPromote a clean snapshot, no data movement

What to Do When Ransomware Hits

Detecting Ransomware in the Storage Layer

Preparation changes the character of the response. The work runs calm and rehearsed instead of frantic and improvised. ioFortify starts the clock in your favor. The same deduplication engine that makes snapshots efficient also serves as a sensor. Encryption produces unique blocks, which defeats deduplication, and ioFortify catches that signature inside the storage layer within 10 to 15 minutes. That window sits well inside the roughly six day average dwell time attackers count on.

The detection insight

Encryption produces unique blocks, which breaks deduplication. That broken signature is the alarm, and it surfaces in the storage layer in minutes rather than days.

The Response Path

From the alert, the response follows a short, practiced path.

  1. Mount a clean snapshot that is 10 to 15 minutes old in a quarantined state.
  2. Scan the snapshot, then remove the payload if it is present.
  3. Promote the clean snapshot to primary, which mounts with no data movement, and tear down the infected copy, keeping a forensic image.

There is no restore from backup, no wait for capacity, and no per VM rebuild loop. A clean data center comes back in minutes, and the forensic copy preserves how the attack unfolded.

Using Infrastructure to Prepare for Ransomware Is a Decision You Make Now

The platform decides how an attack ends long before it starts. Isolation contains it. Drills make the response familiar. Immutable snapshots, ioGuardian, and replication hand you clean copies at every level. ioFortify shortens the gap between compromise and detection from days to minutes. Using infrastructure to prepare for ransomware is not a product you buy in a panic. You build it in, and then you rehearse it.

Two actions move you forward today. Set immutability and a retention window on the snapshots that anchor recovery. Then schedule a recovery drill this quarter and run the full workflow end to end. The goal is a day when the ransom note arrives and your data center is already back.

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Frequently Asked Questions
Should I make every snapshot immutable?
No. Every snapshot is read only by default, which covers routine recovery. Set immutability on the snapshots that anchor your ransomware recovery, and give them a retention window. A retained immutable snapshot holds until that window expires, even against an attacker who gains administrative access and tries to delete it.
Does VDC isolation replace my firewalls?
No. VDC isolation contains the blast radius by architecture, so an attack inside one virtual data center has no path into the others. Firewalls still govern traffic, and the containment holds without manual rules written in the middle of an incident.
How does ioFortify detect ransomware?
Encryption produces unique blocks that defeat deduplication. ioFortify watches for that drop in efficiency inside the storage layer and alerts within 10 to 15 minutes, well inside the roughly six day window attackers count on.
How is ioFortify different from my EDR or SIEM?
ioFortify watches the storage layer rather than endpoints or logs. It detects the deduplication drop that encryption causes, and it fires faster than most SIEM queries. It complements existing security tooling rather than replacing it.
Can I recover a single VM instead of the entire data center?
Yes. Snapshots exist at the instance, VDC, and VM level, and a coarser snapshot drills into its contents. You can extract one VDC or one VM when recovery needs a single piece rather than the whole environment.
What recovery point can I expect?
VergeOS takes snapshots as often as every 10 to 15 minutes, so the recovery point sits in that range. That cadence replaces the hours, sometimes days, that separate protection events in a backup-first model.
What makes a recovery drill different on VergeOS?
A clone stands up a full, isolated copy of a VDC with no data movement and no new hardware. Teams rehearse the real workflow against a faithful copy of production without risk to live systems.

Filed Under: Ransomware

June 17, 2026 by George Crump

An AI-powered VMware alternative now runs in production, and the mechanics matter more than the headline. VergeIO built Verge CLI as three working parts that let an AI assistant operate a VergeOS environment in plain language, with the administrator setting the limits. This post walks through how the pieces fit, what happens when you issue a request, and why a single code base changes the result.

Key Takeaways
  • Verge CLI ships as three components that work together: a command-line interface, an MCP server, and a set of agent skills.
  • One code base and one API let the assistant act across compute, storage, networking, and data protection in a single coherent operation.
  • You choose the model. Cloud assistants such as Claude Code and OpenAI Codex, or local open-weight models such as Llama, Qwen, and DeepSeek, all connect through the same open standard.

Inside the AI-Powered VMware Alternative: The Brains, the Hands, and the Know-How

Verge CLI is three parts, not one tool. Each part has a job, and together they turn a plain-language request into a real change on the platform. Think of them as the hands, the brains, and the know-how.

The Brains, the Hands, and the Know-How: the three components of the AI-powered VMware alternative Verge CLI

The Hands: The Command Line of the AI-Powered VMware Alternative

The Verge CLI maps to the full VergeOS API. One command set covers compute, storage, networking, and data protection. These commands are the actions the assistant takes on the platform. VergeOS has always been API-first, so the command line was a natural extension of its design. It runs commands the platform already understands rather than clicking through a graphical console.

The Brains: The MCP Server

The MCP server builds on the open Model Context Protocol. It connects an AI platform to the environment and gives the assistant a secure, scoped view of the environment and its documentation. The assistant reasons against VergeOS documentation through this server, so its conclusions track how the platform behaves rather than what a model guesses. The server also marks the boundary of what the assistant can see and touch, which keeps the AI inside the limits that an administrator sets.

The Know-How: Agent Skills in an AI-Driven VMware Alternative

The agent skills encode how VergeOS experts design networks, build environments, and run diagnostics. The assistant works like a seasoned operator instead of a generic chatbot. A request to build a secured three-tier environment carries the firewall rules between tiers that an experienced engineer would apply. The know-how is the difference between a tool that answers documentation questions and an operator that builds it correctly the first time.

One Code Base, One API: How the AI-Driven VMware Alternative Works

One code base and one API across compute, storage, networking, and data protection in the AI-powered VMware alternative

Here is what the architecture buys you. A request to build a virtual machine, place it on a network, carve storage, and set replication runs as one coherent action against one API. The assistant issues the work, the platform executes it, and the state stays consistent.

A layered stack works differently. The same request crosses vSphere, vSAN, NSX, and a separate backup product. Each part can half succeed, and the agent then reconciles partial state across four control planes. The single code base removes that class of error. One request, one API, one result.

MCP-based infrastructure management now spans several vendors. Nutanix, Red Hat, and Microsoft offer solutions, and community servers are available for VMware and Proxmox. VergeOS gives an AI assistant control of compute, storage, networking, and data protection through a single code base and a single API. Some vendors simulate this with a unified control plane in a management GUI. Those platforms still draw on layered and acquired components, with networking and data protection as separate licensed layers. VergeOS runs as one code base from the start, so the assistant meets one API rather than a federation of them. The architecture beneath a VMware alternative decides the result, a point made in the analysis that architecture is what separates one VMware alternative from another.

Root-Cause Diagnosis in an AI-Driven VMware Alternative

One data model spans all four domains, so the assistant traces a symptom from virtual machine to storage to network and finds the real source. A system-wide diagnostic reads real log lines, follows the dependency from the surface fault to the underlying cause, and reports where the real problem lives. The reasoning comes from VergeOS documentation through the MCP server, so the diagnosis matches how the platform runs.

“The agent reasons against VergeOS documentation through the MCP server, so its diagnoses come from how the platform actually works, not a model’s guess. Because one API spans compute, storage, and networking, it traces a fault across the whole stack that tooling stitched across separate products would miss.” Larry Ludlow, Chief Architect of Verge CLI, VergeIO

Choosing the Model for Your AI-Powered VMware Alternative: Cloud or Local

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The integration stays the same. Only the location of the model and the data changes. Most organizations run a cloud frontier assistant such as Anthropic Claude Code or OpenAI Codex, and that path fits the majority of accounts. Teams under strict security or compliance rules run a local open-weight model, such as Llama, Qwen, or DeepSeek, through a runtime like Ollama and keep all operations and environment data on their own infrastructure. A customer can start with a cloud assistant and later move to a local model on the same platform. The open standard makes any MCP-compatible client a valid front end, so you are not locked to a single vendor’s assistant.

The Administrator Stays in Control of the AI-Driven VMware Alternative

The assistant proposes the work and runs it step by step once an administrator approves each change. The administrator decides what the assistant sees, what it runs on its own, and what waits for sign-off. The buyer and the operator remain the same person who runs the platform today. The assistant shortens the learning curve on a new platform and guides the team through advanced features they would otherwise postpone. An AI-powered VMware alternative changes the daily work and leaves ownership where it belongs. It does not replace the people who own the environment.

“Customers leaving VMware want lower cost and infrastructure ready for AI. Verge CLI gives them both. Claude Code, Codex, or a local model they run themselves can all operate the platform directly, and the administrator stays in control of what it’s allowed to do.” Jason Yaeger, SVP of Product and Engineering, VergeIO

What an AI-Powered VMware Alternative Means for You

For IT Administrators

An AI-powered VMware alternative pays off most for the person who runs the environment. Verge CLI removes the busywork and shortens the learning curve, and it keeps you in control the whole time.

Skip the Learning Curve

The assistant guides you through VergeOS in plain language, so you are productive on day one rather than month three.

Operate the Whole Stack

Create VMs, build networks, carve storage, and set data protection in one conversation, without mastering four separate tools.

Stay in Control

You decide what the assistant runs on its own and what waits for your approval. It runs only inside the limits you set.

Find Root Cause Faster

The assistant reasons against VergeOS documentation and traces a fault across compute, storage, and networking, so you fix the real problem rather than the symptom.

Reclaim Your Time

Hand off routine work like VM creation, workload moves, and network changes, and spend your hours on the projects that matter.

Grow Your Value

You become the operator of an AI-assisted platform, with deeper reach and more impact.

Getting Started with the AI-Powered VMware Alternative

Four steps put the capability to work. Install Verge CLI on the VergeOS environment. Connect an MCP client, whether a cloud assistant or a local model. Verify the connection and set the limits on what the assistant may run on its own. Then operate in plain language, from building networks to deploying workloads to diagnosing faults. The same flow holds for a VMware refugee mid-migration and for an existing customer adopting deeper features. Either way, an AI-powered VMware alternative reaches production sooner.

Key Terms

Model Context Protocol (MCP). An open standard that connects an AI assistant to a system and its documentation. Verge CLI uses MCP so any compatible client works.
Agent skills. Encoded expert procedures for designing networks, building environments, and running diagnostics, which let the assistant act like a trained operator.
Open-weight model. A model a customer can run on its own hardware, such as Llama, Qwen, or DeepSeek, which keeps all operations and data in house.

The AI-Powered VMware Alternative vs. a Layered Stack

CapabilityVergeOS with Verge CLILayered stack (vSphere, vSAN, NSX, backup)
Control surfaceOne API across the full stackA separate API per product
Cross-domain requestOne coherent actionCrosses four control planes, can half succeed
Root-cause diagnosisOne data model traces the fault end to endStitched across separate tools
AI integrationSupported part of the productUnsupported community add-ons for VMware and Proxmox
Model choiceCloud or local through MCPTied to the vendor’s assistant
Live Webinar · June 23, 2026
See It Run Live: Chat With Your Infrastructure

Reading about a plain-language operation is one thing. Watching it build a network and trace a fault is another. VergeIO and Truth in IT run an AI agent against a live VergeOS environment on June 23, 2026, at 1:00 PM ET. The 45-minute session is a live demo and Q&A with the team that built Verge CLI.

Register for the June 23 Webinar Schedule a Technical Deep Dive

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Verge CLI?
Verge CLI is a three-part release for VergeOS: a command-line interface that maps to the full API, an MCP server, and a set of agent skills. Together they let an AI assistant operate the platform in plain language, with the administrator deciding what runs on its own and what needs approval.
Which AI assistants work with it?
Any MCP-compatible client. That includes Anthropic Claude Code, OpenAI Codex, and local open-weight models such as Llama, Qwen, and DeepSeek run through Ollama.
Does the AI run my infrastructure on its own?
Only within the limits you set. The assistant proposes the work and runs it step by step once an administrator approves each change.
How is this different from AI on VMware or Proxmox?
Community projects deliver AI access to VMware and Proxmox as unsupported add-ons. Verge CLI ships and is supported as part of VergeOS, and it controls compute, storage, networking, and data protection through one code base and one API.

Filed Under: AI

June 16, 2026 by George Crump

For Immediate Release

VergeIO Launches Verge CLI, Enabling an AI-Powered VMware Alternative

Verge CLI gives an AI platform commands to act, an MCP server connects it over the open Model Context Protocol, and agent skills supply the know-how. Claude Code, OpenAI’s Codex, or a local model can operate a customer’s VergeOS environment in plain language, with the administrator in control of what it can do.

Ann Arbor, Mich.June 16, 2026VergeIO · VergeOS
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Verge CLI Datasheet

Get the full technical breakdown of Verge CLI, the MCP server, and the agent skills.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich., June 16, 2026. VergeIO, the Private Cloud Operating System company, today announced Verge CLI, a complete command-line interface for VergeOS that turns a leading VMware alternative into an AI-powered platform. Alongside the CLI, VergeIO is releasing an MCP server built on the open Model Context Protocol and a set of agent skills. Together they let agentic AI platforms, including Anthropic’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex, work with a customer’s VergeOS environment directly, building networks, deploying workloads, and diagnosing faults in plain language, with the administrator deciding what the assistant runs on its own and what needs their approval.

Key Takeaways
  • Verge CLI is a complete command-line interface that maps to the full VergeOS API, covering compute, storage, networking, and data protection from one command set.
  • An MCP server on the open Model Context Protocol and a set of agent skills let Claude Code, OpenAI’s Codex, or any compatible platform operate a VergeOS environment in plain language.
  • The administrator decides what the assistant runs on its own and what needs approval, so conversational operation runs inside the limits a person sets.
  • Privacy or security sensitive teams run a local open-weight model, keeping every operation and all environment data on their own infrastructure.

API-First by Design

VergeOS has always been API-first, so Verge CLI was a natural extension of the company’s development philosophy. The interface maps to the full VergeOS API, so one command set covers compute, storage, networking, and data protection. That command set is the hands an AI platform uses to act, and a set of agent skills supplies the know-how to drive it. Claude Code or Codex reads the environment, proposes the work, and runs it within the limits the administrator sets. Infrastructure that used to mean per-core VMware licensing now takes direction in plain language.

“Customers leaving VMware want lower cost and infrastructure ready for AI. Verge CLI gives them both. Claude Code, Codex, or a local model they run themselves can all operate the platform directly, and the administrator stays in control of what it’s allowed to do.”

— Jason Yaeger, SVP of Product and Engineering, VergeIO

Open by Standard, Including Local AI

The MCP server is built on the Model Context Protocol, an open standard, so any compatible client works rather than a single vendor’s assistant. Teams with privacy or security requirements run a local open-weight model, such as Llama, Qwen, or DeepSeek through a runtime like Ollama, and keep every operation and all environment data on their own infrastructure.

Key Terms
Verge CLI
A complete command-line interface for VergeOS. It maps to the full platform API, so one command set drives compute, storage, networking, and data protection.
MCP Server
A server that gives an AI platform a secure, scoped window into a VergeOS environment and its documentation, built on the open Model Context Protocol.
Model Context Protocol (MCP)
An open standard supported by today’s major AI platforms. It lets any compatible client connect to the VergeOS environment rather than a single vendor’s assistant.
Agent Skills
A library that encodes how VergeOS engineers design networks, deploy workloads, and run diagnostics, giving an AI platform the know-how to drive the command set.
Local Open-Weight Model
A model such as Llama, Qwen, or DeepSeek run inside the customer’s own environment through a runtime like Ollama, so no environment data leaves their infrastructure.

One API, Diagnoses Grounded in How the Platform Works

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Because one API spans the whole platform, an AI agent traces a fault end to end rather than guessing from a single layer. The agent reasons against VergeOS documentation through the MCP server, so its conclusions come from how the platform actually behaves.

“The agent reasons against VergeOS documentation through the MCP server, so its diagnoses come from how the platform actually works, not a model’s guess. Because one API spans compute, storage, and networking, it traces a fault across the whole stack that tooling stitched across separate products would miss.”

— Larry Ludlow, Chief Architect of Verge CLI, VergeIO

How Verge CLI Compares

 Traditional VMware StackVergeOS with Verge CLI
Management surfaceSeparate consoles for hypervisor, storage, and networkOne command set across compute, storage, networking, and data protection
AI operationChatbots that answer documentation questionsClaude Code, Codex, or a local model that acts on the environment
Control modelScripts and manual change windowsAdministrator sets what the assistant runs on its own and what needs approval
Data privacyCloud-bound AI servicesLocal model option keeps all environment data on-premises
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Verge CLI?
Verge CLI is a complete command-line interface for VergeOS. It maps to the full platform API, so one command set covers compute, storage, networking, and data protection, whether an administrator types the commands or an AI platform proposes them.
How do Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex work with VergeOS?
An MCP server built on the open Model Context Protocol connects the AI platform to the environment, and a set of agent skills supplies the know-how. Claude Code or Codex reads the environment, proposes the work, and runs it within the limits the administrator sets.
Does the AI act on its own?
The administrator decides what the assistant runs on its own and what needs their approval. Conversational operation runs inside the limits a person sets, not outside them.
Can we use a local AI model for privacy or security?
Yes. Teams with privacy or security requirements run a local open-weight model, such as Llama, Qwen, or DeepSeek through a runtime like Ollama. Every operation and all environment data stay on their own infrastructure.
When is Verge CLI available?
Verge CLI is available on June 23rd to VergeOS customers, along with the MCP server and agent skills.
VergeIO Launches AI-Powered VMware Alternative

About VergeIO

VergeIO is the Private Cloud Operating System company, headquartered in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Its platform, VergeOS, collapses virtualization, storage, networking, and data protection into a single integrated software stack running on commodity hardware. VergeOS is a leading VMware alternative, recognized by DCIG as a Top 5 VMware Alternative across both the SME and SLED categories. Verge CLI is available on June 23rd to VergeOS customers.

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###

Filed Under: Press Release

June 15, 2026 by George Crump

Refurbished SSD telemetry determines whether a used enterprise drive is suitable for production. The Refurbished SSD Framework webinar aired on May 7, and six weeks of follow-up calls have surfaced one question more than any other. Buyers accept the 40 to 60 percent discount against new pricing. The objection that survives is narrower and sharper. How does a team know the supplier’s stated wear number is honest? The answer never rests on trust. It rests on measurement.

Audio Overview AI-generated
VergeIO · Exposing The Refurbished SSD Odometer Rollback

Most refurbished data center hardware suppliers are reputable. They serialize inventory, document the chain of custody, and stand behind their wear representations. The risk sits with the exception, not the rule, and the platform’s job is to catch that exception before it matters.

A supplier can reset SMART counters and present a drive as having 20 percent wear when the actual figure is near 90. The buyer who accepts that number on faith inherits the risk. The buyer who measures the drive with platform-level telemetry manages it. That single distinction separates a procurement decision from a gamble.

The control that does the work is not a single reading at intake. It is a continuous measurement against the platform’s thresholds throughout the drive’s entire production life. A label can be reset. A trajectory under real writes cannot. That trajectory is what VergeOS watches.

Key Takeaways
  • Refurbished SSD telemetry does not depend on catching a reset counter at the door. Continuous monitoring plus redundancy keeps a mislabeled drive from costing you data.
  • VergeOS raises a drive warning when wear level or reallocated sectors cross a threshold, then a proactive replacement procedure swaps the drive with the cluster online and redundant.
  • A reset counter hides a drive’s starting point, not its trajectory. Real production writes push a worn drive across the thresholds far sooner than its label predicts.

A Reset Counter Hides the Starting Point, Not the Trajectory

The wear-leveling indicator falls in a straight line as data is written. The slope per terabyte stays about the same across the drive’s life. A counter reset to 20 percent counts down from that false floor at the normal rate, and a single day of synthetic writes barely moves it. The label, on its own, resists a quick catch at intake.

The trajectory tells the truth the label hides. Worn NAND retires cells under real writes. Reallocated sectors grow, and read and write errors climb. Wear crosses its threshold sooner than a true 20 percent drive ever would. VergeOS reads those signals per drive and raises a status the moment a limit is passed.

The documented warning statuses are exact:

  • Wear level exceeded its maximum threshold.
  • Reallocated sectors exceeded their maximum threshold.
  • Read or write error threshold reached.

Each one bubbles up to the System Dashboard as a Warning or an Error. The drive that lied about its starting point announces its real condition the first time production pressure finds it.

Key Terms
SMART
Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology. The industry standard that exposes a drive’s internal health counters to the host. Enterprise SSDs publish roughly twenty attributes.
Drive status
VergeOS assigns each vSAN drive a health status. Warning and Error states flag wear-level, reallocated sectors, and read or write errors that exceed a defined threshold, and they appear on the System Dashboard.
Subscription
A VergeOS alert or report. On-Demand subscriptions email the moment a threshold, warning, or error fires. Scheduled subscriptions email periodic dashboards so a team can track trends over time.
TBW
Terabytes Written. The rated write endurance of an SSD. Refurbished enterprise drives typically retain 80 to 95 percent of their rated TBW, a figure that the wear leveling count directly exposes.

The Seven Refurbished SSD Telemetry Attributes to Watch

Enterprise SSDs publish around twenty SMART attributes. Seven of them account for the bulk of the predictive value, and reading them together matters more than reading any one alone.

  • Total writes track progress toward the rated TBW.
  • Reallocated sectors indicate physical media degradation, as failed cells are added to a remap list.
  • Wear leveling count reports how much fresh NAND the drive has left to redirect writes onto.
  • The ECC error rate indicates that the drive silently corrects more errors per read, a leading indicator that the firmware tries to hide.
  • End-to-end error rate flags controller-level corruption that should sit at zero.
  • Power-on hours and temperature round out the picture: the first as context, the second as an accelerant for every other failure mode.
Refurbished SSD telemetry in VergeOS: SMART measurement of wear level and reallocated sectors

VergeOS turns three of these into operational triggers. Wear level, reallocated sectors, and read or write errors each have a maximum threshold, and crossing one of them moves the drive into a Warning or Error state.

The metric that tells the truth about a used drive is wear leveling, not power-on hours. A drive rotated out of a hyperscaler on a three-year calendar can show high power-on hours and low wear. A drive run hard in a write-heavy role shows the reverse. A team that reads wear leveling against the supplier’s claim reads the drive correctly.

Using Refurbished SSD Telemetry to Lower the Odds

Intake testing is the first filter, not the whole answer.

  1. Install the refurbished drives behind VergeOS.
  2. Run a stress workload. Watch for reallocated sectors and read or write errors that a healthy drive of the stated wear would not produce.
  3. Cross-check the reported wear against host writes and power-on hours. A drive that contradicts itself, or that sheds sectors under load, goes back before it ever holds production data.
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Walk through the intake protocol and the architecture that backs it, start to finish.
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The limit deserves a plain statement. A clean counter reset can pass a short bench test, and the wear percentage moves too little in a day to expose a falsified baseline on its own. Intake testing reduces the likelihood of introducing a bad drive into production. Catching the rest is the job of continuous monitoring.

The protocol still earns its place. It turns the supplier’s wear number into a claim that the platform inspects rather than accepts, and it returns the obviously bad units on the first batch. The passing drives enter an environment that keeps watching them.

Continuous Monitoring Is Where the Protection Lives

The drive that slips through the intake meets the part that matters. Refurbished SSD telemetry does its real work in production, where VergeOS watches every drive and alerts on the conditions that precede failure. An On-Demand subscription emails the moment a drive crosses its wear-level or reallocated-sector threshold or changes status. A scheduled subscription delivers the drive and tier dashboards at a daily or weekly interval, so a team can track trends between alerts. VergeOS recommends running both against the System Dashboard for timely awareness of drive issues.

VergeOS proactive drive replacement with the node in maintenance mode and the cluster online

A mislabeled drive reveals itself here. Its real wear crosses the threshold weeks ahead of the schedule its fake label implied. The Warning status fires on the dashboard. The team replaces the drive before it fails, using the proactive replacement procedure, with the node in maintenance mode and the rest of the cluster online and redundant. The mislabel costs a drive swap, not a data loss.

This is the answer to the original objection. A team does not need to prove the wear number honest at the door. It needs to detect a drive drifting toward failure and act before the failure occurs. Continuous monitoring paired with proactive replacement does exactly that.

Refurbished SSD Telemetry Needs a Platform Behind It

VergeOS continuous drive monitoring dashboard with threshold-based alerts

Monitoring buys you a warning, and the architecture prevents data loss. The two work as a pair, and refurbished SSD telemetry earns its value only on a platform built to act on what it finds. VergeOS pairs monitoring with synchronous replication at RF2 or RF3, so the loss of one or two drives results in no rebuild storm and no service interruption.

The failures that a team does not predict are still handled without interrupting the application. Same-batch refurbished drives age together, and a cohort can move toward the edge in parallel. When a loss exceeds replication tolerance, ioGuardian streams missing blocks to running VMs as they request them, and live migration moves workloads off the degraded nodes. Recovery becomes the data path during the failure, not a restore job after it.

Provenance stops deciding the final outcome. A worn drive and a fresh drive present the platform with the same event, a drive crossing a threshold or dropping out, and the response does not change with the drive’s history. The case has been made that storage recovery architectures matter more than drive reliability, and that principle is what lets refurbished media stand on equal footing with new.

Label-Based Trust vs VergeOS Monitored Operation

 Label-Based TrustVergeOS Monitored Operation
Supplier wear claimAccepted as stated on the invoiceTreated as a claim the platform inspects under load and across production life
Worn drive in productionDiscovered when it failsCrosses a wear or reallocated-sector threshold and raises a Warning first
Response to the signalReactive replacement after an outageProactive replacement with the cluster online and redundant
Failure beyond toleranceBackup restore and downtimeioGuardian inline streaming, no service interruption

Refurbished SSD Telemetry is a Math Problem.

The webinar closed on a single line. Refurbished enterprise flash is a procurement decision, not a courage test. Six weeks of conversations have moved the proof from the loading dock to the running cluster. The discount lives on the invoice. That discount runs deep enough to pay for a VMware exit with refurbished hardware. The protection lives in refurbished SSD telemetry that watches every drive and an architecture that absorbs the failures it sees coming.

The fear that kept refurbished drives out of the data center was the fear of a number no one could check. VergeOS does not ask a team to check that number once. It checks the drive every day it runs.

Two steps put the framework to work. Watch The Refurbished SSD Framework on demand to see the architecture in full. Then run the Refresh Cost Diagnostic against your own environment and put a number on what a refurbished refresh saves.

Frequently Asked Questions
Can VergeOS catch a supplier who resets the SMART counters?
Not always at intake. A clean reset can pass a short bench test, and the wear percentage moves too little in a day to expose a falsified baseline. VergeOS catches the drive in production instead. Real writes push a worn drive across its wear and reallocated-sector thresholds far sooner than its label predicted, and the platform raises a Warning the moment that happens.
What does VergeOS do when a drive crosses a threshold?
It assigns the drive a Warning or Error status that bubbles up to the System Dashboard, and any On-Demand subscription you configured sends an email. From there the proactive replacement procedure swaps the drive with the node in maintenance mode and the rest of the cluster online and redundant.
Why read wear leveling instead of power-on hours?
Power-on hours measure time, and wear leveling measures use. A drive rotated out of a hyperscaler on a fixed calendar can show high hours and low wear. A write-heavy drive shows the reverse. Wear leveling against the supplier’s stated figure is the comparison that reveals the drive’s real condition.
Does refurbished media put data at more risk than new media?
The failure rate runs higher on used media. The failure consequence does not. VergeOS responds to a drive crossing a threshold or dropping out the same way regardless of the drive’s history, and RF2 or RF3 plus ioGuardian carry the data through. Continuous monitoring paired with redundancy turns the higher failure rate into a maintenance task rather than a data-loss event.

Filed Under: Storage Tagged With: Enterprise SSD, Proactive Drive Replacement, refurbished SSDs, SMART telemetry, Storage architecture, VergeOS

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