VMware’s initial focus for releasing the vCloud Initiative
is to assist customers to bridge the current datacenter to the future Cloud. 150,000 customers are already standardizing
on VMware, which has definitely prepared them for the this evolution. VMware’s main focuses with their initiative are:
Enterprise Ready, Choice and Application Compatibility. All this is rolled up into the vCloud Express
offering, which enables customers easy web access (with a simple credit card
transaction) to build an external cloud presence.
All the typical big players are involved, along with 1000+
service providers (including one I consider
close to home, but more on that later) –
just look for the VMware Ready logo. Providing a cloud platform is a natural
evolution for companies like AT&T, who currently provide an entire range of
hosting services to over half of the Fortune 50.
Workload Federation is the ability to migrate server
workloads around within a company’s federated cloud (internal + external), even across datacenters. Savvis introduced a cloud offering that
includes tiered SLAs. Their web
interface for signing up and setting up a virtual private data center includes
a standard reference architecture with drag and drop components and selection
of tiers (including storage tiering).
Standards will be an important key to long term cloud
success and VMware is leading the charge.
In my opinion, this is the kind of stuff VMware should be
showing everyone, not just the press and bloggers.
Hopefully we’ll see more of this in the keynote tomorrow morning. This actually helps solidify the cloud into
an actual offering that users can see and believe in.