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      • Data Availability is Critical During the Memory SupercycleRising RAM and flash prices force organizations onto aging and refurbished hardware. Data availability determines whether those hardware failures are routine events or business-stopping emergencies. VergeOS delivers layered protection from the drive level through node-level redundancy to cross-site replication, all on the hardware you already own.
      • Will Hard Drives Save Us From the Flash and RAM Supercycle?DRAM is up 171%. Flash jumped 55–60%. Will hard drives solve the flash and memory supercycle? The short answer is no — and here's what actually does.
      • The Even Higher Cost of a Storage Refresh in 2026DRAM prices are up 171% year-over-year. Proprietary enterprise flash is on backorder. VMware licensing changes are compounding the pain. Here is why a storage refresh in 2026 costs more than ever — and what IT teams can do about it.
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Performance

March 9, 2026 by George Crump

The ability to reduce RAM consumption may be the most important factor in choosing a VMware alternative in 2026. What started as a licensing decision after Broadcom’s acquisition has become an infrastructure economics decision. Organizations began evaluating replacements to escape licensing uncertainty. Then the Flash and Memory Supercycle hit.

Key Takeaways
  • The Memory and Flash Supercycle is driving DRAM prices up 171% YoY through 2027, NAND flash up 55–60% in a single quarter, and server deliveries delayed by months. VMware licensing changes from Broadcom compound the pressure.
  • Memory ballooning, transparent page sharing, and hypervisor swapping are reactive workarounds that manage scarcity after it occurs. None of them reduce total physical RAM requirements.
  • VergeOS integrates virtualization, storage, networking, and data protection into a single code base that runs at 2–3% memory overhead, compared to the double-digit percentages consumed by multi-product stacks.
  • Topgolf reduced server count by 50% per venue across 100+ locations. Alinsco Insurance migrated a mission-critical VxRail environment during business hours with zero downtime and gained memory headroom on the same hardware.
  • VergeOS runs safely on commodity NVMe drives, uses global inline deduplication to reduce flash capacity requirements, and delivers snapshot-driven local replication through ioGuardian that protects against multiple simultaneous drive failures without hardware RAID.
  • The platform’s global deduplicated cache operates across all VMs across all nodes, caching only unique data blocks from the already-deduplicated storage pool. This drives higher cache hit rates and fewer flash reads without wasting RAM on redundant cached data.

DRAM prices are expected to increase 171% year-over-year through 2027. NAND flash contract prices jumped 55–60% in Q1 2026 alone. Server orders that once shipped in weeks now face multi-month delivery delays. The platform you choose now determines how much RAM, flash, and hardware you need for the next three to five years.

How a Hypervisor Can Reduce RAM Consumption

Finding a VMware alternative is still the primary mission. But the supercycle raises the bar. It is no longer enough to swap one hypervisor for another just because it costs less to license. The replacement must also reduce RAM consumption per workload, require fewer servers, and reduce flash storage costs. Any platform that relies on memory ballooning, transparent page sharing, or hypervisor swapping to manage RAM is using the same software tricks the industry has relied on for years. Those techniques react to memory pressure after it occurs. None of them reduce the total physical RAM your infrastructure actually requires.

Key Terms
  • Memory and Flash Supercycle — A sustained period of rising DRAM and NAND flash prices driven by AI infrastructure demand, DDR4 end-of-life, and constrained fabrication capacity. Industry analysts project tight supply through at least 2027.
  • Memory Ballooning — A hypervisor technique that uses a guest driver to reclaim unused RAM from idle VMs. Reactive by design, it fails under tight VM sizing and causes cascading performance degradation when multiple VMs spike simultaneously.
  • Transparent Page Sharing (TPS) — A memory deduplication technique that merges identical OS pages across VMs. Limited to identical pages, disabled by default in VMware since 2014 due to security concerns, and ineffective for application data.
  • Global Inline Deduplication — VergeOS technology that identifies and eliminates duplicate data blocks at the storage layer before they are written to flash. Reduces total flash capacity requirements, lowers write amplification to extend drive life, and feeds only unique blocks into the RAM cache.
  • Global Deduplicated Cache — A VergeOS RAM cache that operates across all VMs across all nodes and draws from the already-deduplicated storage pool. Holds only unique data blocks, increasing effective cache capacity and hit rates without the CPU overhead of a separate cache-level deduplication algorithm.
  • ioGuardian — VergeOS data availability technology that uses snapshot-driven local replication to protect against multiple simultaneous drive failures. Eliminates the need for hardware RAID controllers and delivers consistent performance during failures and rebuilds.
  • Commodity NVMe — Standard NVMe solid-state drives that cost significantly less than enterprise or server-class SSDs. VergeOS makes commodity drives production-safe through software-managed wear leveling, global deduplication to reduce writes, and ioGuardian replication to handle failures gracefully.

We are hosting a live webinar on March 12 that goes deeper into each of these points. Register for Architecting for the Flash and Memory Supercycle to see how the platform decisions you make today determine your infrastructure costs for the next three to five years.

Start with an Efficient Code Base That Reduces RAM Consumption

How a Hypervisor Can Reduce RAM Consumption

The first question to ask any VMware alternative is how much RAM the platform itself consumes before a single VM even starts. VMware environments running vSphere, vSAN, vCenter, and NSX stack four separate products on every host. Each product reserves memory for its own management processes. Add external replication software and hardware RAID controllers, and the cumulative overhead climbs even further.

VergeOS takes a different architectural approach. It delivers a complete private cloud operating system that integrates virtualization, storage, networking, and data protection as services within a single code base. There is no separate storage product. There is no separate networking product. The platform is built with global deduplication, enabling synchronous replication without the typical capacity impact and delivering better, more consistent performance in production and during failures.

How a Hypervisor Can Reduce RAM Consumption

It eliminates the need for hardware RAID controllers, which are also increasing in price because they consume RAM. VergeOS includes built-in data replication for disaster recovery, and its global inline deduplication reduces capacity costs at the disaster recovery site as well. The entire platform runs at 2–3% memory overhead. Compare that to the double-digit percentages consumed by multi-product virtualization stacks and HCI platforms that reserve tens of gigabytes per node before workloads even start.

A lower baseline means more RAM available for production workloads on the same hardware. During a supercycle, that difference translates directly into fewer servers needing to be purchased at inflated prices.

Use Existing Hardware and Reduce How Much You Need

VergeOS installs on any x86 server from any manufacturer. Organizations migrating from VMware continue to run on the same physical servers they already own. There is no hardware forklift upgrade. No waiting six months for new server deliveries that keep getting pushed back as memory and flash shortages worsen. The servers, RAM, and SSDs already purchased and deployed remain in production.

Getting there does not require the purchase of a parallel environment or even a maintenance window. VergeOS supports node-by-node migration from VMware. Evacuate workloads from one host, install VergeOS on that host, migrate VMs onto the new platform, and repeat across the remaining hosts. Production continues running throughout the process. Alinsco Insurance completed this on a five-node VxRail cluster running a mission-critical insurance application that cannot tolerate downtime. The team migrated node by node during business hours with zero downtime. Critical web servers were moved at night out of an abundance of caution, but even those migrations produced no service interruption. During a supercycle, this approach eliminates the capital expense of purchasing a second set of servers to stand up alongside the existing environment.

Because VergeOS consumes less RAM per host, organizations can increase VM density and consolidate to fewer servers. Topgolf, operating more than 100 venues globally, reduced each site from six-node VxRail clusters to three-node VergeOS clusters. That is a 50% server reduction per venue. Alinsco Insurance continued to run on the same VxRail hardware and internal SSDs after migration, and servers that felt constrained under VMware gained additional headroom under VergeOS.

The freed servers create immediate value. One becomes a dedicated ioGuardian server, delivering N+2 or greater (N+X) data protection without purchasing new hardware or hardware RAID. The remaining servers become part donors. Pull the DRAM and NVMe drives and redistribute them across the active production nodes. VergeOS supports mixed node types and mixed node roles in the same cluster, so the redistribution does not require matching hardware specifications.

Reduce Flash Costs with Commodity SSDs

The supercycle affects flash storage as well as memory. Enterprise and server-class SSDs carry steep price premiums that continue to climb alongside NAND contract prices. Commodity NVMe drives are rising in price, too. But the price gap between enterprise and commodity is widening, not narrowing, and commodity drives do seem to be more readily available. Organizations that can safely run on commodity flash pay less per terabyte today relative to enterprise alternatives than they did a year ago.

VergeOS runs safely on commodity SSDs. The platform’s storage engine manages I/O scheduling and wear management at the software layer, reducing dependence on the drive’s internal controller. Global inline deduplication reduces total writes to each drive, directly extending drive life. ioGuardian’s snapshot-driven local replication protects against multiple simultaneous drive failures without data loss or downtime, so that a commodity drive that wears out faster than an enterprise drive is replaced gracefully. No hardware RAID controller is required. The combination makes commodity flash a production-safe choice at a fraction of the cost of enterprise SSDs.

A Cache That Benefits from Deduplication

Most virtualization platforms cache storage data independently on each node. If ten nodes access the same data block, ten separate copies sit in ten separate caches. That wastes RAM on redundant data across the cluster.

VergeOS approaches caching differently. The platform performs global inline deduplication at the storage layer, so the storage pool contains only unique blocks. The RAM cache operates across all VMs across all nodes and draws from that already-deduplicated pool. The cache holds only unique data without running a separate deduplication algorithm inside the cache itself. More unique blocks fit in the same physical RAM, driving higher cache hit rates and fewer reads from flash.

An important factor in making this work across nodes is VergeOS’s optimized internode communication protocol, purpose-built for this use case and free from the overhead of chatty iSCSI or NFS protocols. We will explore the technical details of this architecture in an upcoming post. The takeaway for now: VergeOS does not waste RAM caching duplicate data.

The VMware Alternative Decision Just Got Bigger

The search for a VMware alternative is no longer just about licensing. The supercycle means the platform you choose determines your RAM consumption, your flash costs, your server count, and how long your existing hardware stays in production. Choose a platform that relies on the same memory tricks the industry has used for decades, and you inherit the same overhead during the most expensive hardware market in years. Choose a platform built to reduce RAM consumption from a single efficient code base with built-in data availability, and you start with less overhead, run on the servers you already own, and reduce how many you need going forward.

Frequently Asked Questions
  • What is the Flash and Memory Supercycle? — A sustained period of rising DRAM and NAND flash prices driven by AI infrastructure demand, DDR4 end-of-life, and constrained fabrication capacity. DRAM prices are expected to increase 171% year-over-year through 2027, and NAND flash contract prices jumped 55–60% in Q1 2026 alone. Server delivery times have extended to multi-month delays.
  • Why don’t memory ballooning and transparent page sharing solve the problem? — These are reactive techniques that manage memory pressure after it occurs. Memory ballooning reclaims unused RAM from idle VMs but fails under tight sizing. Transparent page sharing merges identical OS pages but has been disabled by default in VMware since 2014 due to security concerns. Neither technique reduces the total physical RAM your infrastructure requires.
  • How much RAM overhead does VergeOS consume? — The entire VergeOS platform — including virtualization, storage, networking, and data protection — runs at 2–3% memory overhead. Compare that to multi-product VMware stacks that consume double-digit percentages, or HCI platforms like Nutanix that reserve 24–32 GB per node for controller VMs before workloads start.
  • Can I migrate from VMware without buying new servers? — Yes. VergeOS installs on any x86 server from any manufacturer and supports node-by-node migration from VMware. Evacuate workloads from one host, install VergeOS, migrate VMs onto the new platform, and repeat. The servers, RAM, and SSDs you already own stay in production. Alinsco Insurance completed this on a five-node VxRail cluster during business hours with zero downtime.
  • How does VergeOS reduce the number of servers needed? — Lower platform overhead means more RAM available for production workloads on each host, which increases VM density. Topgolf reduced each venue from six-node VxRail clusters to three-node VergeOS clusters — a 50% server reduction across more than 100 locations. Freed servers become parts donors or dedicated ioGuardian data protection nodes.
  • Is it safe to run commodity NVMe drives in production? — With VergeOS, yes. The storage engine manages I/O scheduling and wear management at the software layer. Global inline deduplication reduces total writes to each drive, extending drive life. ioGuardian’s snapshot-driven local replication protects against multiple simultaneous drive failures without hardware RAID, so a commodity drive that wears faster is replaced gracefully with no data loss or downtime.
  • How does VergeOS cache data differently from VMware or Nutanix? — Most platforms cache storage data independently on each node, meaning duplicate blocks are cached separately on every host. VergeOS performs global inline deduplication at the storage layer first, then the RAM cache draws from the already-deduplicated pool. The cache holds only unique blocks across all VMs across all nodes, using an optimized internode protocol instead of iSCSI or NFS. More unique data fits in the same physical RAM, driving higher cache hit rates.
  • What happens to servers freed up after consolidation? — One freed server becomes a dedicated ioGuardian node, delivering N+2 or greater data protection without a new hardware purchase and without hardware RAID. The remaining servers become parts donors — pull the DRAM and NVMe drives and redistribute them across active production nodes. VergeOS supports mixed node types and mixed node roles, so no matching hardware specifications are required.
What is the Memory and Flash Supercycle?

A sustained period of rising DRAM and NAND flash prices driven by AI infrastructure demand, DDR4 end-of-life, and constrained fabrication capacity. DRAM prices are expected to increase 171% year-over-year through 2027, and NAND flash contract prices jumped 55–60% in Q1 2026 alone. Server delivery times have extended to multi-month delays.

Why don’t memory ballooning and transparent page sharing solve the problem?

These are reactive techniques that manage memory pressure after it occurs. Memory ballooning reclaims unused RAM from idle VMs but fails under tight sizing. Transparent page sharing merges identical OS pages but has been disabled by default in VMware since 2014 due to security concerns. Neither technique reduces the total physical RAM your infrastructure requires.

How much RAM overhead does VergeOS consume?

The entire VergeOS platform — including virtualization, storage, networking, and data protection — runs at 2–3% memory overhead. Compare that to multi-product VMware stacks that consume double-digit percentages, or HCI platforms like Nutanix that reserve 24–32 GB per node for controller VMs before workloads start.

Can I migrate from VMware without buying new servers?

Yes. VergeOS installs on any x86 server from any manufacturer and supports node-by-node migration from VMware. Evacuate workloads from one host, install VergeOS, migrate VMs onto the new platform, and repeat. The servers, RAM, and SSDs you already own stay in production. Alinsco Insurance completed this on a five-node VxRail cluster during business hours with zero downtime.

How does VergeOS reduce the number of servers needed?

Lower platform overhead means more RAM is available for production workloads on each host, increasing VM density. Topgolf reduced each venue from six-node VxRail clusters to three-node VergeOS clusters — a 50% reduction in servers across more than 100 locations. Freed servers become parts donors or dedicated ioGuardian data protection nodes.

Is it safe to run commodity NVMe drives in production?

With VergeOS, yes. The storage engine manages I/O scheduling and wear management at the software layer. Global inline deduplication reduces total writes to each drive, extending drive life. ioGuardian’s snapshot-driven local replication protects against multiple simultaneous drive failures without hardware RAID, so a commodity drive that wears faster is replaced gracefully with no data loss or downtime.

How does VergeOS cache data differently from VMware or Nutanix?

Most platforms cache storage data independently on each node, meaning duplicate blocks are cached separately on every host. VergeOS performs global inline deduplication at the storage layer first, then the RAM cache draws from the already-deduplicated pool. The cache holds only unique blocks across all VMs across all nodes, using an optimized internode protocol instead of iSCSI or NFS. More unique data fits in the same physical RAM, driving higher cache hit rates.

What happens to servers freed up after consolidation?

One freed server becomes a dedicated ioGuardian node, delivering N+2 or greater data protection without a new hardware purchase and without hardware RAID. The remaining servers become parts donors — pull the DRAM and NVMe drives and redistribute them across active production nodes. VergeOS supports mixed node types and mixed node roles, so no matching hardware specifications are required.

Filed Under: Private Cloud Tagged With: Cache, data protection, Deduplication, FlashAndMemorySupercycle, Migration, Performance, servers, Storage, VergeOS, VMware, VMware alternative

October 15, 2024 by George Crump

The StorageReview VergeIO lab results show that VergeOS meets the demands of IT professionals looking for a VMware Alternative. StorageReview’s evaluation revealed that VergeIO not only matches VMware’s performance; it surpasses it. Their testing shows that VergeIO is a viable choice for those seeking a more efficient, high-performance solution at a lower cost.

The VergeIO Review Process

StorageReview VergeIO Lab Results:

StorageReview’s in-depth evaluation used an advanced hardware setup that included Solidigm SSDs, AMD EPYC processors, and Giga Computing’s dense liquid-cooled nodes. The lab environment was designed to replicate the real-world demands of enterprise IT infrastructure, emphasizing high-performance workloads like virtualization, VDI, and database management.

The goal was to assess VergeIO’s ability to deliver seamless performance while evaluating its built-in disaster recovery features and ease of use.

Highlights: StorageReview VergeIO lab results

  1. 1000 VM Bootstorm in 71 Seconds
    VergeIO was able to boot 1,000 VMs in just over a minute—an impressive feat that highlights its ability to handle high-demand workloads efficiently. This benefits enterprises deploying large VDI environments or managing dynamic workloads where quick spin-up times are critical.

  2. 6.9 GB/s Write Performance
    VergeIO’s platform achieved 6.9 GB/s write speeds during testing. For organizations dealing with large data volumes, this means more efficient data transfers and reduced latency for write-intensive applications. Solidigm’s SSDs were crucial in achieving these results, demonstrating the synergy between VergeIO’s software and modern hardware.

StorageReview VergeIO Lab Results: Scalability and Cost Efficiency:

IT professionals need a high-performance alternative to VMware that offers speed, scalability, and cost-effectiveness. VMware’s licensing can be intricate and expensive, particularly for large organizations. In comparison, VergeIO’s per-node licensing is more straightforward and predictable. VergeIO’s base license encompasses all advanced features, including storage tiering and disaster recovery, without incurring extra costs for add-ons.

VergeIO’s model is at least 50% cheaper than VMware’s, providing enterprises a straightforward way to lower infrastructure costs without sacrificing performance. This pricing transparency is a significant advantage for companies looking to scale efficiently.

StorageReview VergeIO Lab Results: vSAN with Storage Tiering

StorageReview VergeIO Lab Results:

VergeIO offers storage tiering as part of its base package, allowing IT teams to optimize data placement based on performance needs. Solidigm SSDs were used in the lab to create two distinct storage pools—Tier 1 with high-performance TLC SSDs and Tier 2 with larger, more cost-effective QLC SSDs. VergeIO’s ability to seamlessly manage different storage types within the same platform simplifies operations while ensuring that performance-critical applications can access the fastest available storage.

VergeIO’s vSAN includes no additional licensing fees for consumed capacity, setting it apart from competitors like VMware, which requires higher-tier licenses for high-capacity environments.

StorageReview VergeIO Lab Results: Migration

One of the biggest concerns for organizations migrating away from VMware is the complexity of the migration process. However, StorageReview found that VergeIO makes this transition seamless. The platform includes native integration with vCenter and ESXi APIs, allowing IT teams to sync and migrate VMs with minimal disruption. The ability to retain critical settings like MAC addresses and storage tiers ensures a smooth and efficient transition to VergeIO. Enroll in our hands-on lab to perform a VMware Migration in real life.

StorageReview VergeIO Lab Results: Data Protection and Recovery

Beyond performance, IT professionals require solutions that ensure a critical workload’s protection and recoverability. VergeIO’s built-in disaster recovery capabilities provide a clear advantage. During testing, the platform’s high availability feature demonstrated quick recovery, with VMs becoming available again on another node in 138 seconds after a node failure. When coupled with IOGuardian, even this short time can be potentially eliminated thanks to its ability to provide real-time recovery from multiple simultaneous drive or server failures.

For data protection IOClone, based snapshots enable independent snapshots that aren’t reliant on previous clones, improving recovery times. This independence means that IT can have thousands of active snapshots and retain them indefinitely without impacting performance. VergeOS provides a robust scheduling capability for managing snapshot retention. Enroll in our hands-on lab to learn the full potential of VergeOS Snapshots.

By incorporating disaster recovery directly into the platform, VergeIO eliminates the need for separate solutions, reducing complexity and cost. VergeIO can replicate an entire data center in minutes. This replication includes data and the complete configuration (VM, network settings), enabling fast and comprehensive recovery even on different hardware.

VergeIO simplifies backup and recovery processes with native snapshot and replication features. Its disaster recovery integration within the central platform ensures that backups can be completed quickly, minimizing the risk of data loss and reducing downtime.

For organizations where uptime and data protection are paramount, VergeIO’s ability to seamlessly integrate these capabilities into its core offering—without additional licensing fees—offers significant operational advantages.

The Bottom Line: A VMware Alternative That’s Easier, Faster, and More Affordable

VergeIO’s performance, scalability, and built-in disaster recovery features make it a compelling alternative to VMware. The StorageReview VergeIO Lab Results show that VergeIO performs exceptionally well under real-world conditions, simplifies operations, and reduces costs.

With 50% lower licensing costs, simplified management, and a platform built to handle complex enterprise workloads, VergeIO offers a solution that meets the needs of IT professionals looking to reduce overhead without compromising on performance or protection.

If you’re exploring VMware alternatives, VergeIO is worth serious consideration. To learn more about how VergeIO performed in the lab, register for our webinar on October 23rd with StorageReview and Solidigm. We’ll demonstrate these results firsthand.

For the full StorageReview report, visit StorageReview’s Lab Evaluation.

Filed Under: Storage Tagged With: Alternative, Performance, Storage, VMware

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