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Tanzu expansion, edge offering, ‘next evolution’ of VMware Cloud launch

Sumit Dhawan, the president of VMware Inc. is shown yesterday during a keynote in which he released new details about the company's new cloud offering.

VMware Inc. launched a number of new product offerings this week, key among them being what it called the “next evolution” of VMware Cloud; the VMware Edge Cloud Orchestrator, which is designed to help organizations cost-effectively install, configure, operate and maintain their edge deployments; and an expansion of the firm’s Tanzu application platform.

All three were announced Tuesday at VMware Explore 2023 in Las Vegas, and will play a key role in the company’s current and future development plans.

VMware Cloud, the company said, “combines VMWare Cloud Foundation software and VMware Cloud Services. Cloud Foundation combines the best innovations from VMware’s on-premises and public cloud software offerings into a unified stack to deliver a consistent environment across any on-premises, hyperscaler cloud, or partner cloud environment.

“VMware Cloud services simplify the deployment and operations of VMware Cloud Foundation environments across any cloud or on premises environment.”

Organizations, it said, can deploy and manage their environments in three ways:

Also part of the launch is VMware NSX+, a new cloud-managed service offering of NSX for multi-cloud environments (previously Project NorthStar) that the company said “advances core networking and security capabilities for VMware Cloud,” and vSAN Max, “a new offering within the vSAN family that will deliver petabyte-scale disaggregated storage.”

The VMware Edge Orchestrator (formerly VMware SASE Orchestrator) now contains new capabilities to orchestrate and manage multiple edge services at scale.

According to a release, “enterprises are looking to transform both the value they are delivering to their customers as well as how they deliver this value. The challenge in achieving the goal of leveraging the edge effectively is the complexity across people, processes, and technology.

“This includes a lack of reliable connectivity with a central data centre or cloud location, a lack of IT expertise on-site at disparate sites, and the need to scale deployments to thousands of sites, often across domains and geographic boundaries.”

Enhancements to the orchestrator, VMware said, will “help customers plan, deploy, run, visualize, and manage their edge environments in a friction-free manner – allowing them to run edge-native applications focused on business outcomes. The VMware Edge Cloud Orchestrator (VECO) will deliver holistic edge management by providing a single console to manage edge compute infrastructure, networking, and security.”

VMware said it defines software-defined edge as a “distributed digital infrastructure that runs workloads across a number of locations, close to endpoints that are producing and consuming data. It extends to where the users and devices are – whether they are in the office, on the road or on the factory floor.”

As for Tanzu, the company launched a suite of new offerings it said will allow organizations to develop, deliver, and optimize apps across clouds. The new platform, “brings together existing Tanzu and Ario products with new integrations” and portfolio enhancements.

The expanded platform includes:

“Modern applications and multi-cloud are at the heart of digital transformation,” the company stated. “VMware research shows more than 70 per cent of CIOs are developing net-new cloud native apps, and modern apps designed for the any-cloud model have now overtaken traditional apps in the enterprise.

“Business leaders are keenly aware that software agility and speed to market are critical to a business’s ability to compete successfully and grow revenue.”

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