VMware And Google Announce Integration Of Google Cloud Platform Services Into vCloud Air

Google and VMware announced today that they would be integrating selected Google Cloud Platform services into vCloud Air. The selected services include: Google Cloud Storage, Google BigQuery, Google Cloud Datastore, and Google Cloud DNS. VMware expects to add other services in the future to further enhance the hybrid cloud market.


Google and VMware announced today that they would be integrating selected Google Cloud Platform services into vCloud Air. The selected services include: Google Cloud Storage, Google BigQuery, Google Cloud Datastore, and Google Cloud DNS. VMware expects to add other services in the future to further enhance the hybrid cloud market.

The added Google Cloud Platform services will be tightly integrated into vCloud Air and will function like any other service offered from VMware. Now vCloud Air customers can have access to the above-mentioned services from Google Cloud Platform services that offer: a low-cost object storage service, a real-time analytics service, a schemaless NoSQL database service, and a global-distributed low-latency DNS service. An example of the advantages would be when VMware ran the VMworld 2014 application on vCloud Air. Millions of data points on application usage were generated and could be quickly analyzed and stored using Google BigQuery.

The VMware and Google networks will be directly connected together ensuring that all traffic between the services travels over a dedicated private connection. VMware customers can use their current vCloud Air credentials to access the newly integrated services. Customers will also be able to use Google Cloud Platform’s native API and can contact Global Support Services for support on Google Cloud Platform services the same as they would for vCloud Air support now.

Availability and pricing

The companies are currently integrating their services and expect to offer the new services on vCloud Air during the first half of 2015. vCloud customers will have access to the new services under their existing contracts and will pay for what they use of the new Google services.

Blog Post Announcement

Adam Armstrong

Adam is the chief news editor for StorageReview.com, managing our internal and freelance content teams.

Recent Posts

Dell Advances Data Protection Portfolio Amid Rising Cyber Threats

Dell Technologies is advancing its data protection portfolio to enhance cyber resiliency across appliances, software, and as-a-service offerings amid rising…

2 days ago

HPE Cray Storage Systems C500 Lowers Storage Costs For Entry-level Snd Midrange HPC/AI Clusters

Since its launch in 2019, the Cray ClusterStor E1000 Storage System has emerged as a pivotal technology in the field…

2 days ago

Quantum Introduces Quantum GO Subscription Service For Data Management

Quantum Corporation has introduced Quantum GO, a subscription service designed to meet the escalating data demands and cost considerations enterprises…

3 days ago

JetCool Unveils Cold Plates for the NVIDIA H100 GPU

JetCool has launched an innovative liquid cooling module tailored for NVIDIA's H100 SXM and PCIe GPUs, claiming a significant advancement…

5 days ago

iXsystems Expands TrueNAS Enterprise with H-Series Platforms

iXsystems has launched the TrueNAS Enterprise H-Series platforms, designed to give organizations ultimate performance. The H10 model is now available,…

1 week ago

Microsoft Azure Edge Infrastructure At Hannover Messe 2024

Hannover Messe 2024 represents a significant event in the global industrial sector, serving as the world's largest industrial trade fair.…

1 week ago