Under the new VMware licensing pricing model, one CPU license will cover up to 32 cores in a single CPU. If a CPU has more than 32 cores, additional CPU licenses will be required. Credit: Getty / VMware VMware is increasing its CPU licensing prices for customers running CPUs with more than 32 physical cores. Effective April 2, if CPUs with more than 32 cores are deployed, then customers need to purchase additional CPU licenses. Such a change doesn’t seem surprising. For the longest time, 32-core processors seemed like a pipe dream. Intel was hovering in the range of 20-odd cores, and AMD was a non-player. Then came the AMD Epyc with 32 cores in 2017, followed by Epyc 2 with 64 cores in 2019 . Intel Xeons currently top out at 28 cores, but the company is promising to ship a 38-core “Ice Lake” generation and 48-core “Cooper Lake” generation this year. So while the pricing increase hits AMD harder, for now, AMD doesn’t seem to be terribly bothered by it, based on this statement from a company spokesman: “AMD continues to lead the industry on performance, features and TCO in virtualized environments for both 1-socket and 2-socket systems. While the new VMware licensing guidelines change the economics slightly for higher-core-count processors, AMD remains committed to VMware as a winning virtualization solution for AMD EPYC customers.” My read of that statement is that AMD doesn’t feel targeted. Others responded more negatively to the news: “I’ve seen a bunch of customers that want to move over to those higher-core-count types of CPUs. Now one VMware license doesn’t cover you anymore. You’re going to need two, or four, or whatever amount of licensing it works out to be. While that hurts everybody, it’s evidence that maybe VMware doesn’t understand the edge computing in the midmarket where we play. I give the marketing department props for coming up with some spin, but at the end of the day it’s a price increase,” said Jeff Ready, CEO and co-founder of cloud provider Scale Computing, in a statement sent out to tech press. I can understand that the pricing increase will hit some companies hard, but was VMware supposed to ignore the growing core count of CPUs and give everyone a freebie from core 33 and up? VMware licenses are by the core, and if the core count rises, VMware would be a bit derelict to not alter its licenses. “A fact of data center life is that as IT infrastructure hardware evolves, so does the software that runs on it. That includes the pricing models that vendors adopt to gain what they believe is fair value for their products,” said Charles King, principal analyst with Pund-IT. “On the plus side, VMware’s changes will impact a relatively small number of enterprise customers. That doesn’t mean that those companies and the VMware partners who support them won’t feel pain, especially those who have already planned and funded their 2020 budgets,” King added. Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that Scale Computing uses both Epyc processors and VMware software. Related content news analysis AMD launches Instinct AI accelerator to compete with Nvidia AMD enters the AI acceleration game with broad industry support. First shipping product is the Dell PowerEdge XE9680 with AMD Instinct MI300X. By Andy Patrizio Dec 07, 2023 6 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI Data Center news analysis Western Digital keeps HDDs relevant with major capacity boost Western Digital and rival Seagate are finding new ways to pack data onto disk platters, keeping them relevant in the age of solid-state drives (SSD). By Andy Patrizio Dec 06, 2023 4 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center news Omdia: AI boosts server spending but unit sales still plunge A rush to build AI capacity using expensive coprocessors is jacking up the prices of servers, says research firm Omdia. By Andy Patrizio Dec 04, 2023 4 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI Data Center news AWS and Nvidia partner on Project Ceiba, a GPU-powered AI supercomputer The companies are extending their AI partnership, and one key initiative is a supercomputer that will be integrated with AWS services and used by Nvidia’s own R&D teams. By Andy Patrizio Nov 30, 2023 3 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI Supercomputers Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe