VMware vCloud Hybrid Service Available in Europe
VMware, Inc. today announced the general availability of VMware vCloud Hybrid Service in Europe from a data center in Slough, UK. Complementing VMware's existing US data centers, the Slough data center provides customers with a European location that addresses UK and EU compliance and data sovereignty demands.
VMware's UK service expansion demonstrates the company's commitment to provide customers a Hybrid Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) footprint internationally and marks the beginning of a planned rollout of VMware vCloud Hybrid Service across key European locations.
"Customer response to the UK public beta of VMware vCloud Hybrid Service has been tremendous," said Bill Fathers, senior vice president and general manager, Hybrid Cloud Services Business Unit, VMware. "VMware is uniquely positioned to deliver the best of both worlds: the compelling economics and agility of a public cloud, yet fully compatible with a customer's existing data center, applications, management tools, networking and security. As a result, VMware vCloud Hybrid Service solves key business issues allowing organizations to seamlessly extend their data centers to the cloud -- linking both private and public cloud together to create a truly hybrid cloud."
IT organizations are turning to public cloud to enable their business partners with new services and capacity, but recent revelations have put data privacy, security and sovereignty high on the list of customer concerns. A UK data center helps VMware's European customers address local data privacy, security and sovereignty issues, while taking advantage of a public cloud from a global leader.
A recent survey of 200 VMware enterprise customers in the UK conducted byVanson Bourne, an independent and specialist market research provider for the global technology sector, revealed that 86 percent of respondents believe that it is important to ensure their business critical data is stored with a UK-based cloud service provider. In addition, the survey found that 52 percent said that they are required to follow industry data residency regulations and/or compliance standards. Twenty percent were unaware where all of their data, including mission critical data, currently resides.
Delving deeper into existing cloud usage, the survey found that 85 percent of the customers surveyed said that their current public cloud is either not integrated or only partly integrated with their own data center, requiring applications to be recoded to migrate workloads, and 81 percent agreed that they needed a solution that makes their public cloud as easy to manage as their own infrastructure.
"By moving to a single hybrid cloud platform with VMware vCloud Hybrid Service, we'll be able to treat our private and public clouds as a single entity, moving workloads out into the public cloud when necessary without needing to invest in additional hardware," said Michael Briggs, Head of IT Service Operations, Cancer Research. "With VMware vCloud Hybrid Service, my IT teams will be able to quickly launch new products and services, investing in either public or private cloud as appropriate."
VMware vCloud Hybrid Service, built on VMware vSphere, enables customers to extend the same applications, networking, management, operations and tools across both on-premise and off-premise environments. Customers can manage and automate vCloud Hybrid Service from their vSphere console, vCloud Automation Center, vCloud Application Director, and their own tools using the vCloud API.
Designed to serve the growing demand for vCloud Hybrid Service, the new UKdata center delivers a high performance software-defined data center architecture including:
- Fully-redundant VM service - Unlike other clouds, VMware provides a service level agreement for VM availability, backed by fully-redundant server infrastructure using VMware vSphere vMotion. This service maximizes the performance and uptime of customer applications, automatically live-migrating them to other compute nodes if there is server congestion or equipment failure.
- Enterprise-class storage - VMware uses flash-accelerated disk storage, 10G networking and congestion control to meet the performance demands of today's enterprise applications cost-effectively.
- Full network virtualization - At no extra cost, VMware customers can deploy a rich set of load balancers, firewalls and VPNs using virtual networks, switches and routers to replicate their physical networking configuration.