From VMware to the Future

Logo
Presented by

Tytus Kurek (Product Manager), Miona Aleksic (Product Manager)

About this talk

Recent changes at VMware have compelled existing customers to consider alternatives. Many have turned their eyes to open source, looking for total cost of ownership (TCO) reduction and no vendor lock-in. But as a lead architect or an infrastructure owner, you know that this is easier said than done. Join our webinar on 11 June at 4:30 pm CET and learn how to move from VMware to the future. From VMware to the future: Cloud computing is now a central piece of enterprise IT estates. According to Gartner, overall spending on cloud infrastructure will approach 50% of organisations’ IT budgets by 2025. However, moving from VMware to the cloud comes with many potential challenges that only a well-educated and trained infrastructure team can handle with no friction. In this webinar, we’ll present Canonical’s proven path to data centre cloudification. Gain another decade of stability: Canonical’s open source infrastructure comes with long-term support, security, and price commitment. This means that a successful transition results in at least another decade of stability. Even though the migration process is usually more tricky than a simple click, full data centre and workload cloudification leads to tangible business benefits. Don’t trust empty promises set by alleged industry leaders and learn how to execute this transition the right way. Join this webinar to learn: 1) What the future of the infrastructure is going to look like 2) Details of data centre and workload cloudification process 3) About Canonical infrastructure components and their functions 4) How to effectively migrate out of the VMware infrastructure
Related topics:

More from this channel

Upcoming talks (3)
On-demand talks (430)
Subscribers (169267)
Get the most in depth information about the Ubuntu technology and services from Canonical. Learn why Ubuntu is the preferred Linux platform and how Canonical can help you make the most out of your Ubuntu environment.