PALO ALTO, CA--(Marketwired - January 29, 2015) - VMware (VMW) today announced an expanded agreement with Google to deliver greater enterprise access to public cloud services via VMware vCloud® Air™.
The two companies will primarily integrate VMware’s View desktop virtualization software with Google Chromebooks and allow access to Windows apps enabled by VMware's Blast HTML5 technology. This means ...
Google may be losing to Amazon in the cloud wars, but the search giant has a not-so-secret weapon — and some brand-new partners — that could help it fight back. The weapon is Kubernetes, a software ...
VMware and Google are collaborating to run four Google cloud services on VMware’s hybrid vCloud Air. BigQuery analytics, Cloud Storage, Datastore and DNS services will be provided by through the ...
Google LLC’s cloud business and VMware Inc. today announced that they’re expanding their partnership to help enterprises more easily move on-premises applications to the cloud. At the center of the ...
Google and VMware today announced that they are working together to make it easier for Chromebook users in the enterprise to access Windows apps and the Windows desktop on their machines. Using VMware ...
Jeff Jennings, the vice president of customer engineering at Google Cloud, is stepping down. Previously, he was a longtime executive at VMware.
Google has partnered up with VMWare and a startup spun off from it, known as Pivotal, to promote its Kubernetes cloud container software suite. Kubernetes helps manage the containers that cloud ...
Google LLC is partnering with VMware Inc. to make it easier for enterprises to run that company’s virtualization workloads on its public cloud infrastructure. The aim of the partnership revealed today ...
Google today announced a new partnership with VMware that will make it easier for enterprises to run their VMware workloads on Google Cloud. Specifically, Google Cloud will now support VMware Cloud ...
Google and VMware are clashing over private clouds, and the question of whether customers benefit more from building highly virtualized data centers inside their own firewalls or from outsourcing IT ...
Red Hat, IBM, and Microsoft may own the old markets for operating systems. But if Google, VMware, and (yes!) Microsoft have their ways, a new breed of operating systems will displace the old world.
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