Vmware Inc. - Display - 8.17.2.14 May 2026
Gelsinger launched (2019) – embedding Kubernetes directly into vSphere. Then came Tanzu (2020), a portfolio to run and manage Kubernetes across data centers and clouds. The message: “VMware is not anti-cloud. We are pro-any-cloud.”
Prologue: The Server Room Problem (1998) In the late 1990s, a small team of computer scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, led by Dr. Mendel Rosenblum (husband of Stanford professor Diane Greene), kept running into the same maddening problem. Their server rooms were graveyards of inefficiency. vmware inc. - display - 8.17.2.14
But the execution was messy. Tanzu was complex, and customers complained of “confusing licensing.” Meanwhile, AWS launched (a joint engineering effort) – VMware’s olive branch to the public cloud, allowing customers to run their familiar vSphere environment on bare-metal EC2 hosts. We are pro-any-cloud
In a final irony, the date that once symbolized technical wizardry (first live migration) now marks a legacy of lock-in. Some engineers from that 2002 lab have left; others stay, maintaining the kernel of code that still runs inside data centers for 99% of the Fortune 500. Epilogue: The Virtual Legacy VMware did not invent virtualization – IBM mainframes had it in the 1960s. But VMware commoditized it, turning a mainframe luxury into a ubiquitous x86 utility. It enabled the modern cloud era, even if the cloud giants eventually ate its lunch. But the execution was messy
Each physical server—whether running Windows NT, Linux, or Novell NetWare—sat idling at 5% to 15% capacity. To run ten different applications, you needed ten different machines, each consuming power, cooling, and floor space. The industry’s solution was simply “buy more hardware.” Rosenblum and his colleagues, including Scott Devine, Edward Wang, and Edouard Bugnion, asked a different question: What if one physical machine could run many operating systems at once, safely and efficiently?
Today, under Broadcom, VMware is no longer a visionary leader but a cash engine. The name remains on products – vSphere 8, NSX, vSAN – but the soul is different. Yet every time a server runs 20 VMs instead of one, or a VM live-migrates without a hiccup, the ghost of that Palo Alto lab lives on.