At the VMware Explore 2022 Europe conference, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and VMware, Inc. this week extended their alliance to integrate instances of the VMware Cloud platform into the managed HPE GreenLake service.
Hang Tan, chief strategy officer for HPE, said for the first time HPE is managing the entire VMware Cloud stack in addition to its servers and storage platforms via a service that is based on a consumption pricing model. The goal is to reduce the total cost of IT by not requiring IT teams to overprovision IT infrastructure resources to run VMware Cloud, he said.
Previously, IT teams could have deployed VMware Cloud on the HPE GreenLake service in a more disaggregated fashion, but that would have required separate billing processes, added Tan.
Many organizations are currently revisiting their IT strategies during increasingly challenging economic times, noted Tan. The managed HPE GreenLake service enables IT teams to devote more of their internal IT resources to building and deploying applications rather than managing IT infrastructure, he added.
It’s not clear how many organizations are transitioning toward a subscription model for consuming on-premises IT infrastructure, but in the cloud era it’s apparent that more of them are comfortable consuming IT as a service. HPE reported that the HPE GreenLake service supports more than 120,000 users accessing more than one exabyte of data worldwide. Among the top 100 HPE customers, nearly 80% have already adopted the HPE GreenLake platform, the company claims.
The challenge many organizations face is they still need to deploy and update application workloads in on-premises IT environments for both performance reasons and to meet various compliance mandates. The HPE GreenLake service is an effort to bring a cloud operating model to on-premises IT environments running not just VMware Cloud but also a wide range of other rival software stacks that HPE already supports.
Naturally, organizations that have embraced DevOps workflows would need to align the way they build and deploy applications to a managed service. IT teams that find that challenging, however, could opt for a self-service edition of the HPE GreenLake service that provides IT teams with more control over the underlying infrastructure being consumed as a service, noted Tan.
Regardless of approach, it’s apparent that some type of as-a-service approach to consuming IT infrastructure is being more widely employed across what are becoming highly distributed computing environments. Each organization will need to determine for itself to what degree treating IT more as an operating versus capital expense makes the most economic sense.
However, there’s no doubt that infrastructure cycles are generally going to be less disruptive when they are included as part of a multi-year services agreement. IT teams may also find it easier to take advantage of ongoing artificial intelligence (AI) advances when IT environments are managed on their behalf by a vendor.
One way or another, the way IT infrastructure is managed is continuing to evolve at a time when organizations are starting to focus more of their efforts on applications that are becoming more difficult to build, deploy, secure and maintain.