
Virtualize Applications
Articles
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Mar 15, 2024 |
blogs.vmware.com | Victor Chen |Virtualize Applications
Two giants stand out in the ever-evolving landscape of cloud-native technologies:VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) and Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform (OCP). These platforms have been instrumental in reshaping how organizations build, deploy, and manage containerized applications. But what happens when you combine the prowess of these two heavyweights? Buckle up, because we’re about to explore the exciting fusion of OCP, VCF, and NVIDIA AI Enterprise.
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Mar 2, 2024 |
blogs.vmware.com | Virtualize Applications
The September 2024 Open Enrollment for the VMware Guru Licensing Program begins on March 4th, 2024 and ends on March 18th, 2024. What is The VMware Guru Licensing Program? The VMware Guru License Program is one of VMware’s Communities-focused recognition initiatives created specifically for members of the Technical Communities who are not primarily VMware Products and Solutions specialists but have directly and indirectly made significant contributions to the VMware Users Communities.
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Jan 31, 2024 |
blogs.vmware.com | Virtualize Applications
In vSphere 8, in continuation of its historical practices of consistently improving Customer’s experience and retaining their trust and confidence, VMware added an enhancement to the vMotion feature – arguably one of the most popular features in VMware vSphere.
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Sep 12, 2023 |
blogs.vmware.com | Virtualize Applications
The September 2023 Open Enrollment for the VMware Guru Licensing Program will begin on September 11th, 2023 and end on September 30th, 2023. What is The VMware Guru Licensing Program? The VMware Guru License Program is one of VMware’s Communities-focused recognition initiatives created specifically for members of the Technical Communities who are not primarily VMware Products and Solutions specialists but have directly and indirectly made significant contributions to the VMware Users Communities.
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Jul 6, 2023 |
blogs.vmware.com | Virtualize Applications
In spite of our best efforts to amplify the negative implications of (and actively trying to discourage them from) doing so, it turns out that a lot of VMware Customers have been getting very “creative” and configuring their production Microsoft SQL Server instances for shared-disk clustering (aka Failover Clustering Instance – “FCI”) on vSphere by leveraging what appears to be a “work-around” feature – the Multi-Writer Flag.
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