They also have the advantage of being relatively quick to deploy and simple to manage. “They are specifically built for these applications developed by native hybrid clouds, and allow you to have an Infrastructure-as-a-Service for them,” Pavone said. The Neutrino Nodes extend VxRack to cloud-native services including OpenStack, VMware Photon Platform, and Apache Hadoop. “All of the deals we have done with VxRack are with partners,” Pavone said. Notwithstanding the size of the customer, this has basically been a channel business, as is the cast with the majority of VCE sales.
“The VxRack gave them the same experience as with a vBlock, but hyper-converged for massive scale.” “The predominant portion of VCE’s business has been vBlocks, but this has been popular among service providers and globals who wanted massive scalability,” said Todd Pavone, VCE’s Chief Operating Officer. Designed to combine the simplicity of an appliance with the scalability required for the data centre, it has good success n itss first year on the market. It will also strengthen partners’ portfolios by adding to the flexibility of solutions they can offer.ĮMC initially introduced the VxRack a year ago at last year’s EMC World.
This will significantly strengthen VxRack in cloud-native services, initially in OpenStack, and by next-year, in VMware Photon Platform, and Apache Hadoop. LAS VEGAS – Today at EMC World, EMC announced it has added a turnkey cloud-native Infrastructure-as-a-service experience to their VCE VxRack System through new Neutrino Nodes. They also have the effect of being able to turn Pivotal Cloud Foundry into an end-to-end solution for developers. The new nodes equip VxRack to support OpenStack, and by next year, will support Hadoop and the VMware Photon Platform as well.