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      • VMware Alternatives Must Be AI-ReadyAn AI-ready VMware alternative has to do more than replace virtualization. It has to handle the containers, GPUs, and private AI workloads that arrive next. Here are the five things to look for and how to test them on hardware you already own.
      • Surviving Cascading Drive FailureCascading drive failure is the scenario every operator dreads. One drive fails, rebuilds spin up, then a second and third drive give out as the surviving drives wear faster. VergeOS keeps VMs running through synchronous replication, ioGuardian inline recovery, and live migration, even when the cascade exceeds RF2 and RF3.
      • Evaluating Kubernetes? Pick Your Foundation First.On May 20, half the live audience said they're still evaluating Kubernetes. The harder question is whether a team can evaluate Kubernetes and exit VMware at the same time. The platform underneath the cluster decides more of the five-year operations math than the distribution does. Pick the foundation first.
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George Crump

June 3, 2026 by George Crump

To be more than a hypervisor swap, IT professionals need to look for an AI-ready VMware alternative. The Broadcom acquisition has rewritten the economics of virtualization, and many IT teams are still trying to escape renewal costs that no longer justify the value received.

Treating the VMware exit as a single-platform replacement project is a mistake, especially since the next infrastructure decision is already taking shape around AI. That decision arrives faster than most teams expect, and the platform selected during the VMware exit determines whether private AI becomes practical or prohibitively expensive.

An AI-ready VMware alternative now has to pass two tests. The platform has to replace VMware without forcing an application redesign, and it has to support the AI workloads that will land in the data center next.

Key Takeaways
  • An AI-ready VMware alternative has to pass two tests: replace the platform today and run AI workloads tomorrow.
  • A platform that solves virtualization but not AI forces a second infrastructure decision a year or two later.
  • Test AI readiness on existing hardware before committing to a replacement.

Why an AI-Ready VMware Alternative Matters Now

Many organizations begin their AI journey with public services. That approach removes the need to purchase infrastructure, hire specialists, or learn new operational models. The problem is that most successful AI projects eventually encounter limits that are difficult to solve from outside the organization.

Why an AI-ready VMware alternative matters: cost, data gravity, and strategic control

Cost

Public AI platforms charge for every interaction (Token Costs). A handful of occasional questions costs little, and an assistant used by hundreds of employees, a document analysis platform processing millions of records, or a customer-facing application serving thousands of daily requests creates a very different economic picture. Recurring inference costs grow faster than expected, and at some point, owning the infrastructure costs less than renting for every transaction.

Data Gravity

The most valuable AI systems depend on internal documents, customer records, operational procedures, financial data, and institutional knowledge. Moving that data into external AI environments introduces governance, compliance, security, and operational concerns. The more valuable the data, the stronger the incentive to keep the AI system close to the source.

Strategic Control

AI is rapidly becoming part of an organization’s competitive advantage. When customer service workflows, software development assistance, and decision support systems depend entirely on external providers, pricing changes, model updates, and availability decisions remain outside the organization’s control.

Not every AI workload belongs in the data center, and public AI services continue to play an important role. Most organizations will identify a set of AI workloads that cost less, are governed more cleanly, and operate more strategically on their own infrastructure. The platform selected during the VMware exit is also the foundation for those workloads. An AI-ready VMware alternative pulls both jobs together from day one.

Key Terms
Private Cloud Operating System (PCOS)
A single integrated codebase for compute, storage, networking, protection, and AI. Different from hyperconverged platforms that wrap separate products behind one management GUI.
NVIDIA vGPU 20
NVIDIA’s virtual GPU release for the 2026 generation of accelerators. Lets a single physical GPU host multiple virtual machine workloads.
Multi-Instance GPU (MIG)
A partitioning technology that splits a physical GPU into independent slices, each with its own memory and compute. Different workloads share one accelerator without contending for resources.
VergeIQ
VergeIO’s integrated AI runtime. Runs private language models, retrieval-augmented generation applications, document analysis systems, and AI assistants on the same cluster that hosts virtual machines and containers.
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG)
An AI pattern that pulls relevant content from a private document store at query time and feeds it to a language model. Keeps proprietary data inside the organization and improves answer accuracy.

What to Look For in an AI-Ready VMware Alternative

Most organizations begin their VMware evaluation with a familiar checklist. Those requirements remain important. The first job of any VMware alternative is replacing the platform that already runs the business.

Virtualization baseline: the five requirements of an AI-ready VMware alternative

Migration Simplicity

Existing VMware workloads should move without application redesign, operating system changes, or lengthy conversion projects. The migration process should preserve virtual machines, networking, and storage configurations and minimize downtime. Less time rebuilding workloads means faster realization of savings.

Feature Parity

High availability, live migration, snapshots, distributed resource management, virtual networking, and integrated storage services need to operate as mature production capabilities, not features that require workarounds to reach the same outcome.

Stronger Protection

A VMware migration is the opportunity to improve recovery capabilities, not duplicate them. Native replication, immutable snapshots, ransomware detection, rapid recovery workflows, and integrated disaster recovery all belong in the evaluation.

Live Webinar · June 11
Beyond the Hypervisor Swap

Greg Campbell and former VMware CTO Kit Colbert walk through the VergeOS 2026 architecture and how one platform handles VMs, containers, GPUs, and AI services.

Register Now

Operational Simplicity

Many organizations left VMware over more than licensing. They also became frustrated with a virtualization stack that had evolved into multiple products, each with its own management, upgrade, troubleshooting, and expertise. Storage, networking, virtualization, security, automation, monitoring, and recovery became independent layers, often behind a unified interface that hid the seams.

The platform should reduce operational complexity, not recreate it. A unified architecture should run virtualization, storage, networking, protection, and automation as part of a single system. The default decision of swapping hypervisors, replacing VMware with another loosely integrated stack, exchanges one form of complexity for another. The goal is simplification, not substitution.

Licensing Simplicity

Licensing costs were the catalyst for leaving VMware in the first place. Replacing one complicated licensing structure with another postpones the problem. The alternative should deliver predictable economics that hold steady as the environment grows and not penalize the organization for increasing density, which is the consequence of a “per-core” licensing model.

These five requirements form the foundation of an AI-ready VMware alternative, and they are where most evaluations stop. None of them answers the next infrastructure question. They determine whether a platform replaces VMware, not whether that same platform supports the AI workloads many organizations will bring into their own data centers. A platform can satisfy every item on this checklist and still force a second infrastructure decision a year or two later. The missing consideration is AI readiness.

The Missing Criterion of an AI-Ready VMware Alternative

The search for an AI-ready VMware alternative begins where most evaluations end. Many platforms start to fall short on feature parity with VMware. Most also lack a clear path to AI. Some require separate platforms or additional licensing to support containers. Others support GPUs through disconnected infrastructure. Many force organizations to build, operate, and support an entirely separate AI environment.

Virtual machines and AI workloads on a single platform: the AI-ready VMware alternative

The result is a platform that solves today’s virtualization challenge and creates tomorrow’s infrastructure challenge.

As AI workloads move into the private data center, requirements change. Containers become as important as virtual machines. GPU resources become shared infrastructure. AI services need the same data, protection, networking, and recovery framework as the rest of the business.

A platform that cannot meet those requirements forces a second infrastructure decision. New hardware gets purchased, a separate AI environment goes online, and a second team starts supporting it. The organization that set out to simplify operations ends up adding complexity.

The better approach is to select an AI-ready VMware alternative that handles both traditional virtualization and private AI from day one.

Kubernetes as a First-Class Workload

Most modern AI applications deploy as containers. Kubernetes should operate on the same infrastructure as virtual machines and share the same networking, protection, and disaster recovery framework. Containers should not require a separate infrastructure stack.

GPU Sharing and Virtualization

GPUs are among the most expensive resources in the data center, and few organizations justify dedicating an entire accelerator to a single workload. The platform should support NVIDIA vGPU 20 and universal Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) so AI inference, VDI, engineering, and analytics workloads share one physical GPU.

Integrated AI Runtime

Running private AI should not require building a separate AI platform. Solutions such as VergeIQ deploy private language models, retrieval-augmented generation applications, document analysis systems, and AI assistants directly on the cluster that already hosts virtual machines and containers.

Storage Performance

Inference workloads depend on rapid access to models, embeddings, and vector databases. Infrastructure delivering millions of IOPS with sub-millisecond latency on standard NVMe eliminates the bottlenecks that traditionally justified dedicated AI infrastructure.

Architectural and Operational Simplicity

AI should not introduce another set of servers, storage systems, and management tools, nor require a dedicated infrastructure team. The goal is one platform that supports virtual machines, containers, GPUs, and AI services within a single operational framework managed by the same infrastructure team.

That is where many VMware alternatives fall short. They solve the virtualization problem and leave the AI problem for next year. Organizations that avoid a second platform decision choose a platform that handles both from day one.

VMware Exit: Today’s Checklist vs. Tomorrow’s Workload

CapabilityVirtualization-First ChecklistAI-Ready VMware Alternative
ContainersSeparate cluster, separate licenseKubernetes as a first-class workload
GPU supportOptional add-on, often per-hostvGPU and MIG sharing across workloads
AI runtimeBuild it yourselfIntegrated runtime (VergeIQ)
StorageTuned for VM I/ONVMe-native, sub-millisecond latency
Operational modelSeparate team for AIOne team, one operational framework

Prove an AI-Ready VMware Alternative on Hardware You Already Own

Evaluating an AI-ready VMware alternative does not require new hardware. The best proof of concept runs on the cluster already sitting in the data center, whether VxRail, ReadyNode, or commodity servers. On that hardware, migrate a virtual machine, deploy a Kubernetes workload, and run a private AI inference workload.

Measure the migration effort. Measure the infrastructure needed to support containers. Measure how GPUs get shared and managed across workloads. The most telling question is whether one team can manage it all through a common operational framework.

The real test is not whether a platform runs virtual machines. Nearly every alternative does that. The test is whether the platform becomes the foundation for the next decade of infrastructure. If virtual machines, containers, GPUs, and AI services each require different platforms, tools, and teams, then the evaluation has already produced its answer.

Organizations evaluating an AI-ready VMware alternative have one opportunity to make a single platform decision. The harder requirement is picking the platform that eliminates the need for another infrastructure decision eighteen months from now.

Take a VergeOS Test Drive and see how virtual machines, Kubernetes, GPU virtualization, and VergeIQ operate on a single platform. Greg Campbell and former VMware CTO Kit Colbert walk through the architecture live on June 11. Registration is open.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is an AI-ready VMware alternative?
An AI-ready VMware alternative is a platform that replaces VMware for traditional virtualization and also runs the containers, GPU workloads, and private AI services that follow. It treats Kubernetes, GPU sharing, integrated AI runtime, and high-performance NVMe storage as first-class capabilities, not bolt-ons.
Why does AI readiness factor into a VMware replacement?
AI workloads are arriving in production faster than most infrastructure cycles. Cost, data governance, and strategic control will push most successful AI projects into the private data center within the same window as the typical VMware exit. A VMware alternative chosen for virtualization alone will struggle to handle the containers, GPUs, and AI runtime that follow.
What is a Private Cloud Operating System?
A Private Cloud Operating System integrates compute, storage, networking, protection, and AI in a single codebase. The integration happens in the code, not in a management GUI that ties separate products together. The result is one platform, one operational model, and one team.
Does an AI-ready VMware alternative need NVIDIA vGPU and MIG support?
Yes. VergeOS supports NVIDIA vGPU 20 and universal MIG, allowing a single physical GPU to host multiple isolated virtual machine or container workloads. AI inference, VDI, engineering applications, and analytics workloads share the same accelerator infrastructure.
How does VergeIQ fit into an AI-ready VMware alternative?
VergeIQ runs on the same VergeOS cluster that hosts virtual machines and containers. Organizations deploy private language models, retrieval-augmented generation applications, document analysis systems, and AI assistants directly on the platform that already runs the rest of the business. No separate AI infrastructure required.
Can an AI-ready VMware alternative run on the same hardware that hosted VMware?
Yes. VergeOS runs on existing VxRail, ReadyNode, and commodity server hardware. Most VMware replacement evaluations begin on hardware already in production, which removes the need for a separate hardware purchase to validate the platform.

Filed Under: AI Tagged With: AI, Alternative, Container Platform, IT infrastructure, VMware

June 1, 2026 by George Crump

For Immediate Release
ANN ARBOR, MICH. June 2, 2026

VergeIO, the developer of VergeOS, the private cloud operating system, today announced that Kit Colbert, former Chief Technology Officer of VMware and architect of its multi-cloud strategy, has invested in the company and joined its Board of Directors. VergeOS is the infrastructure software for a VMware exit today and for the container and AI workloads that come next.

Two Decades Setting VMware’s Technical Direction

Kit Colbert

Kit Colbert

Member, VergeIO Board of Directors

Colbert spent two decades at VMware. He joined in 2003 as technical lead for vMotion and Storage vMotion, then ran the Cloud-Native Apps business unit that became Tanzu and the Cloud Platform business unit. VMware named him Chief Technology Officer in September 2021, leading 2,400 engineers until Broadcom’s 2023 acquisition.

One Codebase, Not Layers Across Separate Modules

VergeOS is a private cloud operating system, or PCOS. A traditional virtualization stack runs a hypervisor from one vendor, a storage controller from a second, a software-defined network from a third, and a management plane from a fourth. Each layer carries its own license, update cadence, and compatibility matrix. VergeOS replaces all four with a single codebase in which virtualization, storage, networking, and tenancy are native functions. PCOS is the architecture for the next decade of private infrastructure ready for containers and AI, not another hypervisor swap.

Operational & Financial Impact

70%

Reduction in combined capex and opex

  • Fewer teams to staff
  • License costs no longer compound
  • Existing hardware lasts longer
  • Native snapshots, replication, and tenant isolation
  • Ransomware detected quickly, recovery in minutes

Competitors

Integration behind a GUI

Separate software products from separate vendors, stitched together by one management interface. Each layer carries its own license, update cadence, and compatibility matrix.

→

VergeOS

Integration in the code itself

Virtualization, storage, networking, and tenancy run as native functions of one operating system. The architecture supports a VMware exit and lays the foundation for containers and AI.

Twenty years inside VMware taught me that the winner in private infrastructure is a tightly integrated product across compute, storage, networking, and management. VergeIO built a private cloud operating system from the ground up, applying everything the industry has learned over the years. The product is production grade, and its compact architecture runs from the data center to the edge, spanning traditional workloads to the latest container-based and AI applications.

Kit Colbert

Kit Colbert

Member, VergeIO Board of Directors

Kit helped define the modern virtualization era. His seat on the board confirms what we have told customers for years. The way out of the hypervisor tax is not a cheaper hypervisor, it is a Private Cloud Operating System.

Greg Campbell

Greg Campbell

Founder and CTO, VergeIO

Production at Many Mid-Market and Enterprise Customers, Including Topgolf

Customer Spotlight · Topgolf

Out of the entire VMware stack, across more than 100 venues, offices, and data centers.

100+

Venues, offices, and data centers running VergeOS

3

Products replaced: VMware, VxRail, Rubrik

1

Codebase managing the whole estate

“Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware put Topgolf in an awkward position, and an unsustainable cost trajectory. With the VMware platform and business model constantly pivoting, we chose to exit the entire VMware stack. VergeOS replaced VMware and Rubrik, and PowerEdge replaced VxRail across more than 100 venues, offices and data centers. Kit Colbert joining the VergeIO board further solidifies that Topgolf made the right decision to move forward with VergeIO. We picked the right architecture, and the right partner.”

Scott Forehand
Scott Forehand Manager, Global Infrastructure, Topgolf

Live Webinar · Jun 11, 2026

Beyond the Hypervisor Swap

Kit Colbert joins Greg Campbell on the broadcast.
Thursday, June 11 · 1:00 p.m. Eastern · 45 minutes

Register for the Webinar →

Architecture Datasheet

VergeOS 2026 Architecture Overview

A technical deep-dive into the architecture behind the announcement. How VergeOS unifies virtualization, storage, networking, and tenancy in a single codebase.

Read the Datasheet →

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, eliminate compounding licensing layers, and reduce the operational footprint of private infrastructure. The company is headquartered in Ann Arbor, Michigan and serves enterprise, government, and service-provider customers worldwide. For more information, visit verge.io.

Media Contact Judy Smith JPR Communications for VergeIO [email protected] · 818-522-9673

#   #   #

Filed Under: Press Release

May 27, 2026 by George Crump

Cascading drive failure is the storage scenario every IT operator wants to never live through. Picture this. A six-node hyperconverged environment running production workloads. A drive fails on one of the nodes. The rebuild starts. Mid-rebuild, a second drive fails. More rebuilds spin up. A third drive fails. Then a fourth. The cluster has now exceeded the tolerance of RF2, the standard two-copy synchronous replication model in VergeOS. It has also exceeded RF3 if you happened to be running it. On most platforms, this cascading drive failure has just ended the cluster, the VMs are stopped, and recovery is a tape-restore conversation.

Key Takeaways
  • Cascading drive failure is the dominant concurrent-failure pattern, not the exception. One drive fails, rebuilds kick off, surviving drives wear faster under the rebuild load, and the next failure arrives before the cluster has recovered from the first.
  • Hyperconverged and ultraconverged architectures raise the stakes on cascading drive failure. Compute and storage share nodes, so a node loss takes both layers down at once.
  • RF2 and RF3 absorb the first one or two losses. ioGuardian streams missing blocks inline beyond that. Live VM migration moves workloads off degraded nodes in parallel. Users see no interruption.

VergeOS handles a cascading drive failure differently. As each drive fails and the failure surface widens, ioGuardian streams the missing blocks inline to the running VMs as the VMs request them. The platform also live-migrates the affected VMs off the most degraded nodes to surviving ones. By the time three or four servers have effectively crashed, the users are still accessing their applications and data. They never see the cascade happen.

The scenario above is a thought experiment built from common failure patterns. Same-batch drives age together. Rebuild storms stress surviving drives and accelerate the next failure. Correlated wear pushes the cascade forward. The pattern is not exotic, it is statistically expected on used media and possible on new media. The architecture that makes the outcome survivable is shipping today. Once you understand how it works, the case for using refurbished media on the right platform becomes a procurement decision rather than a courage test.

4 of 6Servers effectively crashed in the cascading drive failure scenario
0User-noticed service interruptions during the cascade
40–60%Refurbished enterprise SSD discount versus new pricing

Why Cascading Drive Failure Happens

Cascading drive failure is not exotic. Every hyperscaler operating at scale has documented this pattern in their published field data on flash drives. When one SSD fails inside a same-batch group, the probability that two or three more in that group fail within days is materially elevated. The drives shipped together, ran the same workload, and reached the same point on their wear curves at the same time. Rebuilds make it worse, not better, since the surviving drives carry the rebuild load and accelerate their own wear. This is true of new media. It is more true of refurbished media, where the wear distribution is tighter than a fresh procurement order.

Cascading drive failure from correlated wear curves accelerated by rebuild storms

The architectural answer is the same regardless of failure cause. Consider three causes: a same-batch firmware bug, correlated end-of-life on a single procurement order, and rebuild stress that propagates the next failure. All three look identical to the storage layer. The platform either absorbs the cascading drive failure without service interruption or it does not. Refurbished drives raise the prior probability of a cascade. They do not change the response model.

Converged architectures raise the stakes further. Hyperconverged and ultraconverged platforms run compute and storage on the same physical nodes, so the loss of a node takes both layers down at once. A cluster experiencing cascading drive failure across the same week is also watching three VM hosts wobble. The architectural answer has to absorb both halves of that failure surface, not just the storage half. Refurbished media on a converged platform without inline recovery compounds the problem in two dimensions at once. The protection model has to cover storage and compute simultaneously or it does not cover anything that matters.

How VergeOS Absorbs Cascading Drive Failure

VergeOS uses synchronous replication rather than erasure coding. RF2 maintains two copies of every block on different drives across different nodes. RF3 maintains three. A write only completes once the second or third copy acknowledges. The platform survives the loss of any drive, and at RF3 the loss of any two, with no parity calculation, no rebuild storm, and no degraded-mode performance penalty. The choice between RF2 and RF3 is a capacity question, not an architecture question. The replication model is the same.

VergeOS architecture for cascading drive failure: RF2 and RF3 synchronous replication, ioGuardian inline recovery, and live VM migration

ioGuardian extends the protection model beyond the replication tolerance. It is a separate node holding a complete asynchronous copy of the cluster, updated on every system snapshot. When a failure exceeds the configured RF level, ioGuardian does not attempt to rebuild the failed drives. It steps inline and delivers the missing blocks to the running VMs as the VMs request them. Recovery is not a process that runs in the background. Recovery is the data path itself.

The compute layer responds in parallel. As nodes degrade past the threshold where they can serve workloads reliably, VergeOS live-migrates the affected VMs to surviving nodes. The VMs themselves see no interruption. The combination of inline storage recovery plus continuous VM migration is what lets the cluster absorb the loss of multiple servers without service impact, even when the cascading drive failure exceeds both RF2 and RF3 tolerances.

The Ultra Converged Infrastructure model adds another dimension to cascade resilience. VergeOS supports heterogeneous node types in the same cluster: storage-heavy nodes packed with drives, compute-heavy nodes loaded with CPU and RAM, and classic hyperconverged nodes that balance both. A cluster running this mix spreads the cascade surface across different physical roles. When a same-batch cascade hits the storage-heavy nodes, the compute-heavy nodes keep running VMs uninterrupted. When a compute node fails, the storage nodes keep serving data. The same UCI flexibility that lets you scale compute and storage independently during normal operations also makes it structurally harder to lose a cluster to a single concentrated failure.

Two design consequences follow. The first is performance: the surviving drives never carry a rebuild storm, writes incur no parity recalculation tax, and the failed state holds production-level latency when the ioGuardian target runs on flash. The second is hardware flexibility. The ioGuardian server runs on its own license and its own hardware, and it does not need to match the production cluster in CPU family, generation, or media type. Customers run AMD ioGuardian targets behind Intel production environments, repurpose retired servers as ioGuardian capacity, and place a second ioGuardian instance at a cloud service provider for site-level resilience.

Key Terms
Cascading Drive Failure
A drive failure pattern in which one failure triggers conditions (rebuild stress, correlated wear) that make subsequent failures more likely. Common on same-batch media, more pronounced on refurbished media.
RF2 / RF3
VergeOS’s two-copy and three-copy synchronous replication models. Every write completes only after the additional copies acknowledge. Survives loss of one or two drives with no rebuild storm and no degraded-state performance penalty.
ioGuardian
A separate node holding a complete asynchronous copy of the cluster, updated on every system snapshot. Streams missing blocks inline to running VMs when failures exceed the configured RF level. Eliminates the rebuild process as a recovery mechanism.
Live VM Migration
VergeOS’s mechanism for moving running VMs off degraded nodes to surviving ones without service interruption. Works in parallel with ioGuardian during a cascade so the compute layer keeps serving even as storage absorbs the failure.
UCI Node Types
VergeOS supports storage-heavy, compute-heavy, and balanced hyperconverged nodes in the same cluster. Spreading workloads across heterogeneous node types makes the cluster structurally more resilient to a single concentrated failure pattern.

Telemetry Prevents Failure Before It Starts

The cascading drive failure scenario makes the architecture vivid. It also makes the point in the wrong direction. The goal is not to absorb the failure event. The goal is to never reach it. VergeOS does both. The replication model, ioGuardian, and live migration handle the moment of failure. The telemetry layer makes sure the moment rarely arrives.

VergeOS SMART telemetry catching the early signature of cascading drive failure before the second drive fails

The platform tracks seven SMART attributes on every drive in real time: total writes, power-on hours, reallocated sectors, wear leveling, ECC errors, end-to-end errors, and temperature. The data flows through a subscription model. A subscription is a rule that fires an alert on a defined condition.

The obvious subscription watches a wear-level threshold, and most customers set the first alert at seventy percent. The more useful subscription watches rate of change. An alert that fires when a drive’s wear level jumps ten points within ten days catches drives at risk of failure days or weeks ahead of any fixed threshold. The same rate-of-change subscription catches the early signature of a cascading drive failure before the second drive in a batch fails.

This capability turns refurbished procurement into a verifiable transaction. A reputable supplier delivers drives with a stated wear level and chain-of-custody record. The buyer installs them, runs a stress workload for twenty-four hours, and lets the platform watch. A drive that arrives at ninety percent wear when the supplier represented twenty percent gets flagged before any production data lands on it. The drive goes back, the supplier gets the call, and the framework has been validated by the platform itself. Refurbished media stops being a faith-based purchase and becomes a quantifiable one.

VergeIO On-Demand Webinar
The Refurbished SSD Framework

George Crump and Aaron Richman walk through the secondary-market case, the procurement framework, and the architectural model that makes refurbished enterprise drives a procurement decision rather than a courage test.

Watch the Recording →

This is the two-sided coverage VergeOS delivers. The telemetry layer gives you everything you need to try to prevent the cascading drive failure from happening in the first place, through real-time SMART exposure, rate-of-change subscriptions, and verifiable supplier representations. If the cascade still arrives despite the early-warning systems, the architecture has the resiliency to withstand it, through synchronous replication, inline recovery, live migration, and heterogeneous UCI node distribution that keeps user workloads running through the failure. Both halves of the coverage matter. Most platforms leave the second half to you.

What This Means for Refurbished Procurement

The conventional argument against refurbished enterprise SSDs is elevated failure risk. The argument is correct. The platform decision is what changes the consequence of that risk. New media on a naive architecture faces a different set of stakes than refurbished media on a platform built to absorb cascading drive failure. Erasure coding controls protection at the cost of double-digit-hour rebuilds and a real chance that the next drive failure during rebuild ends the cluster. Synchronous replication, inline recovery, and live migration hold the cluster up regardless of failure cause or media age.

Stack the cost math on top of that architectural reality and the picture changes. Refurbished enterprise SSDs run forty to sixty percent below new pricing in the current market, a market whose underlying dynamics have been characterized as memory and flash prices that are not coming down. The reputable supply chain runs through R2v3-certified vendors who serialize inventory, perform NIST 800-88 sanitization, and stand behind their representations. Drives typically carry eighty to ninety-five percent of rated write life remaining. A buyer who runs SMART verification on intake, sets the rate-of-change subscription, and deploys behind RF2 with ioGuardian has answered the failure-risk question in three independent ways before any customer data lands.

Naive Architecture vs VergeOS for Cascading Drive Failure

 Naive ArchitectureVergeOS
Protection modelErasure coding with parity calculation overheadSynchronous replication with no parity overhead
Recovery on failure within toleranceMulti-hour rebuild storm on surviving drivesContinuous serving with no rebuild
Recovery on failure beyond toleranceRecover from backup, days of downtimeioGuardian inline streaming, no service interruption
Compute response during cascadeVMs stop on affected nodes, manual restart requiredLive migration moves VMs to surviving nodes automatically
Failure surface across node typesSymmetric nodes concentrate the cascadeUCI heterogeneous nodes spread the cascade across roles
Refurbished SSD verificationManual intake test, no continuous monitoringSeven SMART attributes monitored real-time, rate-of-change alerts

The cascade is what makes the scenario memorable. The architecture absorbs cascading drive failure for the same reason it absorbs a same-batch firmware bug, a bad refurbished batch, or a single drive that happened to fail on a busy day. The failure cause is not the variable. The platform is. A companion post, How VergeOS Makes Refurbished SSDs Safe to Run, catalogs the platform’s response to each of the four supplier-side refurb risks.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is ioGuardian and how is it different from a backup system?
ioGuardian is a VergeOS data-protection node that holds a complete asynchronous copy of the production cluster, updated on every system snapshot. When a failure exceeds the configured RF protection level, ioGuardian streams the missing blocks inline to running VMs as the VMs request them. The VMs never stop serving. ioGuardian replaces rebuild as the recovery mechanism for failures beyond replication tolerance. It does not replace backup. It eliminates rebuild as the primary recovery path.
Can VergeOS handle a cascading drive failure that exceeds RF2 and RF3?
Yes. RF2 absorbs the first drive loss, RF3 absorbs the first two. When a cascading drive failure exceeds the configured RF level, ioGuardian streams missing blocks inline to running VMs while live migration moves workloads off the most degraded nodes to surviving ones. The UCI node-type flexibility spreads the failure surface across compute-heavy, storage-heavy, and balanced nodes, so the cascade rarely takes the whole cluster. The cluster keeps serving even when concurrent failures take out a majority of nodes.
Why is cascading drive failure protection more critical on HCI and UCI than on split architectures?
Hyperconverged and ultraconverged platforms run compute and storage on the same physical nodes. The loss of a node takes both layers down at once. A cluster experiencing cascading drive failure is also watching three or four VM hosts wobble. The architectural answer has to absorb both halves of that failure surface, not just the storage half. ioGuardian and live migration were designed for that combined blast radius.
How does VergeOS verify that a refurbished drive’s stated wear level is accurate?
VergeOS exposes seven SMART attributes per drive in real time and lets administrators define subscription rules. A wear-level threshold subscription alerts when any drive crosses a defined value. A rate-of-change subscription alerts when wear increases faster than expected, catching drives that arrived in worse condition than the supplier represented. Both subscriptions fire before production data is at risk.
Does ioGuardian require the same hardware as the production cluster?
No. The ioGuardian server runs on its own license and its own hardware. It does not need to match the production cluster in CPU family, generation, or storage media. Customers run AMD ioGuardian targets behind Intel production environments, repurpose retired servers as ioGuardian capacity, and place a second ioGuardian instance at a cloud service provider for site-level resilience.
What happens if a same-batch firmware bug takes out multiple drives at once?
The architectural response is the same as cascading drive failure from any other cause. RF2 or RF3 absorbs the first one to two failures within tolerance. ioGuardian absorbs the rest by streaming inline, and live migration moves VMs off the affected nodes. The cluster keeps serving. The corrective action with the manufacturer or supplier happens on a normal-business-hours schedule rather than a 3 AM emergency.

Filed Under: Storage Tagged With: cascading drive failure, ioGuardian, live migration, refurbished SSDs, RF2, RF3, UCI, VergeOS

May 27, 2026 by George Crump

VergeIO Principal Engineer David Zarzycki provisions a fresh Kubernetes cluster from inside the Rancher UI, on top of VergeOS, in under three minutes. Recorded on a two-core, four-GB lab node — click to running, end to end. The flow exercises the VergeOS UI extension, the Rancher node driver, and the three upstream Helm charts that wire in from the verge-io Cluster Repository on the way up. No forked Kubernetes, no proprietary CRDs, no second console.

Filed Under: Videos

May 26, 2026 by George Crump

Live webinars produce one piece of data no white paper captures cleanly. That data is the audience poll. On May 20, the first poll on Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax asked attendees how their team runs Kubernetes in production today. Roughly half answered the same way. Kubernetes is still in the evaluation column, not yet running in production.

May 20 webinar poll results showing roughly half of attendees still evaluating Kubernetes

The trade press paints a picture of every enterprise running Kubernetes for years, and the poll told a different story. For a team in that evaluating column, the exit from VMware has become the new priority. The real question is whether the team can evaluate Kubernetes and exit VMware at the same time.

The argument is straightforward. The platform underneath the Kubernetes layer decides more of the long-run operations math than the distribution does. The full architectural case lives in Collapsing the Kubernetes Stack, the long-form companion paper to this post, and the dollar math gets walked separately in The Kubernetes VMware Exit Math, Explained. Pick the platform last, and the distribution choice locks in the storage layer, the snapshot policy, and the vendor count. Pick it first, and the distribution choice becomes a distribution choice.

Key Takeaways
  • Pick the platform first. Exiting VMware to a platform that understands containers answers the foundation question and the distribution question inside the same project.
  • Running Kubernetes on a hypervisor not designed for container workloads adds a translation tax in storage, networking, and lifecycle, and that tax compounds at every renewal.
  • VergeOS publishes three Helm charts from a single Cluster Repository on GitHub, ships persistent volumes natively from the same storage that runs the VMs, and presents both workload types through Rancher. One platform, one support contract, two workload types.

Does the environment need Kubernetes?

The hardest question for a team evaluating Kubernetes is not which distribution to pick. The hardest question is whether the environment needs Kubernetes at all. Plenty of environments need Kubernetes for the right reasons. Plenty of others do not, and the honest answer matters more than the marketing.

The honest answer in the room on May 20 came from David Zarzycki, the engineer who did most of the work on the VergeOS Kubernetes integration. His phrasing was the right one. Is your environment complex enough to warrant the complexity of running Kubernetes at all?

Kubernetes earns its keep when applications change frequently, when teams ship daily, when multi-tenancy is real, when GPU scheduling matters, and when developer self-service is a stated requirement. A two-tier ERP application with a six-month release cycle does not need Kubernetes. A microservices platform with twenty deploy events per day does. Most production environments have both kinds of workloads sitting side by side, and that mix is exactly why the foundation question matters more than the distribution question.

A clean example of a Kubernetes-shaped workload looks like a retail analytics platform that ingests several million transaction events per hour, runs a dozen microservices scaling independently against the event stream, and ships code multiple times a day with feature flags and blue-green rollouts. Storage demand spikes during peak hours. Compute demand spikes around marketing campaigns. The engineering team treats every service as independently deployable. That workload pattern is what Kubernetes was built for, and the platform underneath has to keep up with it. The two-tier ERP application sitting next to that platform does not need any of that machinery, and asking Kubernetes to run it is the wrong tool for the wrong job.

Key Terms
Foundational Platform
The compute, storage, and networking substrate underneath the Kubernetes cluster. A true foundational platform combines hypervisor, storage system, network fabric, and container orchestration on a single code base, with one management plane and one support contract for both VM and container workloads. The foundational platform sets the operational ceiling for everything running on top of it.
Kubernetes distribution
A packaged version of upstream Kubernetes with vendor support, lifecycle tools, and sometimes additional CRDs. Examples include Tanzu Kubernetes Grid, Red Hat OpenShift, SUSE Rancher Prime, and upstream RKE2 or K3s.
Cluster Repository
A registered Helm chart source that Rancher can pull from. VergeOS publishes a single Cluster Repository on the verge-io GitHub. One Rancher registration brings the node driver and pins the three platform charts (CSI, Cloud Controller, Cluster Autoscaler) to verified upstream versions.
Overlay storage
A separate storage system layered on top of the hypervisor storage to give Kubernetes pods persistent volumes. Longhorn, Portworx, OpenEBS, and Rook/Ceph are common examples. The deeper case for treating Kubernetes persistent storage as an architectural coordination problem sits in the analyst piece on StorageSwiss. Overlay storage is the classic indicator the underlying platform does not natively support container workloads.
Translation tax
The operational and architectural cost of bridging between a Kubernetes layer and a hypervisor layer not built together. Shows up as duplicate snapshot policies, separate networking control planes, two backup systems, and three support contracts.

The foundation question, not the distribution question

Kubernetes evaluations almost always start with the distribution shortlist. The standard candidates are Tanzu, OpenShift, Rancher Prime with RKE2 or K3s, and upstream Kubernetes on bare metal. Tanzu’s long goodbye makes that grading harder for any team still committed to vSphere. Each shortlist gets graded against developer experience, ecosystem depth, support contracts, and price. The platform underneath the cluster nodes is a separate conversation. The hypervisor, the storage layer, and the network fabric get graded last, if at all.

The dual mandate of running VMs and Kubernetes containers on a single integrated platform

That order is backward. The platform underneath decides how persistent volumes get carved, how cluster nodes scale, how snapshot and replication policies coordinate across VMs and pods, and how many vendor support contracts the operations team carries forever. The Kubernetes distribution determines which API the developer interacts with. Both matter, and the platform decides more.

The reason the order keeps getting reversed is that the distribution choice is louder. There are conferences for Tanzu and conferences for OpenShift. There is no conference for “the platform underneath.” Teams evaluating Kubernetes hear the loudest voices first and rank the platform later. The five-year math punishes that order.

The platform question reduces to a simple test. Count the support contracts the operations team will carry once the evaluation is over. Count the snapshot engines. Count the storage systems. Count the network control planes. Every number greater than one in that list is a translation tax line item. Every one of those line items comes from picking the distribution first and letting the distribution dictate the platform.

What changes when the platform underneath is integrated

VergeOS as a unified foundation for both VMs and Kubernetes containers

VergeOS treats VMs and Kubernetes containers as workloads on the same code base. The hypervisor, the storage layer, the network fabric, and the Kubernetes integration share one platform. Three Helm charts pulled from one Cluster Repository on the verge-io GitHub. A CSI driver provisions persistent volumes from VergeFS directly, with no overlay storage layer between the pod and the disk. A Cloud Controller Manager handles networking and node lifecycle events through the standard Kubernetes interface. A Cluster Autoscaler handles node-count management through the same upstream project every other distribution uses.

What that means in practice. Rancher remains the management plane the operations team already knows. The cluster object stays standard. The persistent volume comes off the same storage fabric the VMs use, with no Longhorn to license and no Portworx contract to manage. The Kubernetes distribution is whichever flavor Rancher provisions, usually RKE2 or K3s, both upstream. The platform underneath handles the rest, on the same code base it uses to run the VM side of the house. The Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax datasheet lays the architecture diagram and the deployment flow side by side for teams that want the one-page reference.

The typical vSphere Kubernetes stack vs an integrated platform

Capability Typical vSphere Kubernetes Stack VergeOS
Hypervisor licensing VCF subscription, per-core pricing Included in the platform
Kubernetes distribution Tanzu, OpenShift, or Rancher Prime, separate contract RKE2 or K3s via Rancher, no separate licensing
Persistent volumes (CSI) Vendor CSI driver, overlay storage often required (Longhorn, Portworx) Native VergeOS CSI driver, no overlay storage
Networking and load balancing Vendor CNI plus separate load-balancer contract Cloud Controller Manager via standard Kubernetes interface
Snapshot and replication Two policy engines, one for VMs, one for K8s One snapshot and replication engine, both workload types
Vendor support contracts Three or more One
Cluster create time (May 20 live demo) Variable, often 15 to 20 minutes Six minutes, on a lightweight lab system

Why Rancher?

VergeOS works with any Kubernetes distribution that runs on standard upstream nodes. The integration is upstream by design, three Helm charts and a node driver, no fork and no proprietary kernel extension. A team already running OpenShift or Tanzu can keep that distribution and put VergeOS underneath it.

A team that has not committed to a distribution yet should start with Rancher. The reasoning is practical. Rancher carries the lightest commercial weight of the major management planes, with no separate licensing layer attached to RKE2 or K3s. The node driver integration is the cleanest path to a working cluster on VergeOS. The cluster lifecycle, upgrade, and visibility story all sit in one console the operations team learns quickly. Standing up a first cluster on Rancher takes minutes, and the resulting cluster is upstream Kubernetes. No fork, no proprietary distribution to retrain against, and no vendor exit story to plan for later.

Production proof, named on the live call

Two customers got named on the May 20 webinar, and both are cleared for public use. NGAMING / Nesine in Turkey runs a regulated sports-betting platform on VergeOS, with over 180 Kubernetes nodes carrying live transaction workload. The same production validation appears in the VergeIO Kubernetes general availability announcement.

Production VergeOS Kubernetes deployments at NGAMING / Nesine and Topgolf

Their feedback in the rollout was that the engineering response cycle felt like having a software development shop on call, even across time zones. That kind of feedback is rare, and it came up for one reason. The engineers who wrote the VergeOS SDKs are the same engineers who wrote the Kubernetes integration. Same team, same code base, same release cadence.

Topgolf is the second name. Over a hundred VergeOS sites across the United States, replacing VMware. The reason Topgolf gave for choosing VergeOS was not the platform alone. It was the platform plus the partnership, agile enough to respond at scale and capable enough to run the full environment. Both customers are evidence that the integrated-platform argument scales from a 180-node Kubernetes cluster in Turkey to a hundred-site VMware replacement in the United States, on the same code base.

How to start evaluating Kubernetes the right way

The clean path for a team evaluating Kubernetes from a standing start looks like this. Stand up VergeOS as the platform. Register the verge-io Cluster Repository in Rancher. Provision a test cluster through the Rancher UI. Run workloads on it. Cluster creation took six minutes on the live demo, on a lightweight home-lab system with two cores and four gigabytes of RAM per node. Production environments run faster. The three Helm charts come from the same repository. The persistent volumes come from VergeOS storage. The Rancher cluster object behaves exactly the way it would on any other Rancher node driver.

Keep going on Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax

The webinar walks the live demo on real hardware. The white paper walks the full architectural argument.

Watch the on-demand webinar
Read the white paper

From there the distribution question becomes which flavor of upstream Kubernetes Rancher provisions for the team, with RKE2, K3s, or upstream Kubernetes as the practical options. The platform decision is already made. The vendor count is one. The migration question other teams are still working through does not show up at all. There is nothing to migrate from. The team that picks the platform first gets to keep the evaluation focused on the part that matters, which is whether Kubernetes fits the workload, not whether the storage layer fits the Kubernetes distribution.

The fastest way to validate the foundation argument against a specific environment is a 30-minute architecture overview with one of the engineers who built the integration. Aaron Richman, Field Evangelist at VergeIO and one of the presenters on the May 20 webinar, runs these sessions directly. The agenda is the team’s environment, the workloads under consideration, and the path from the current VMware footprint to a VergeOS deployment that handles VMs and Kubernetes on one platform. No slide deck. The session works against a real environment. Book a session and the conversation starts where the webinar left off.

Why this matters to a team still evaluating Kubernetes

The CloudBolt CII study and the most recent CNCF surveys both show the same pattern. Teams deploying Kubernetes on top of a hypervisor not designed for container workloads spend more on storage, more on vendor support, and more on operations than teams picking an integrated platform from the start.

The gap widens at every renewal. Most evaluations get the order wrong, and the reason is consistent. The distribution choice is louder, and the platform choice shapes the next five years.

The teams in the evaluating column during the May 20 webinar still have a chance to get this order right. The teams that have already moved are working through the migration version of the same question. The order matters more than the urgency.

Frequently Asked Questions
We are not running Kubernetes yet. Do we still need to think about a platform like VergeOS now?
Yes. The platform underneath the cluster decides storage, networking, snapshot policy, and vendor count. Picking the platform after the distribution locks in choices harder to reverse than the distribution decision itself.
Can VergeOS run alongside our existing VMware environment during evaluation?
Yes. VergeOS runs on standard x86 hardware and supports parallel deployment. Most evaluations stand up a VergeOS cluster on dedicated hardware, run the Kubernetes workload on it, and migrate VMs over on the team’s timeline.
Which Kubernetes distribution does VergeOS provision?
Rancher provisions the distribution. The default Rancher choices are RKE2 and K3s, both upstream Kubernetes. VergeOS does not fork or modify the distribution. The three platform Helm charts (CSI, Cloud Controller, Cluster Autoscaler) work with the upstream cluster.
Do we have to commit to Rancher to use VergeOS Kubernetes support?
Rancher is the supported management plane today. The Helm charts themselves are upstream and run on any Kubernetes cluster the operations team chooses to manage with kubectl. Rancher is the recommended path for three reasons. UI continuity for operations, node driver integration, and the full cluster lifecycle story in one place.
What happens to our existing VMs when we add Kubernetes workloads?
VMs and Kubernetes containers run on the same VergeOS code base. The same storage. The same networking. The same snapshot and replication policies. The operations team manages one platform, one console, one support contract.
How long does a real production cluster take to provision?
On the May 20 live demo, a three-node RKE2 cluster came up in six minutes on a lightweight home-lab system. Production environments with proper resource allocation typically come up faster. The time is dominated by Rancher provisioning the cluster runtime on the VMs, not by VergeOS provisioning the VMs themselves.

Next steps

The Collapsing the Kubernetes Stack white paper, the Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax datasheet, and the on-demand recording of the May 20 webinar all live in the Kubernetes Without the VMware Tax research center. The fastest way to validate the foundation argument is on your own hardware, with your own workloads. Take a Test Drive Today and provision a Kubernetes cluster through Rancher on VergeOS the same way David showed live.

Filed Under: Private Cloud Tagged With: Container Platform, Kubernetes, Kubernetes Evaluation, Rancher, RKE2, VergeOS, VMware alternative

May 18, 2026 by George Crump

See how VergeOS turns NVIDIA vGPU 20 deployment into a point-and-click operation, with pass-through, vGPU, and MIG partitions configured through the same interface IT teams already use for compute, storage, and networking.

Filed Under: Videos

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