HPE GreenLake Adds AWS’ Kubernetes Service and Other Hybrid Cloud Capabilities
Company announces new enhancements to its HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Enterprise service at its HPE Discover Frankfurt 2022 conference.
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Hewlett-Packard Enterprise (HPE) on Wednesday announced that its HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Enterprise offering is now available worldwide and features new hybrid cloud capabilities including support for Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) Kubernetes software and an improved analytics tool that measures private and public cloud usage and costs.
Six months ago, the company introduced HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Enterprise, a new managed service in which HPE builds private clouds for their customers by designing, installing and managing server and storage infrastructure in their on-premises data centers, edge locations or colocation sites.
The pay-as-you-go subscription service was initially limited to early adopters in the United States and the United Kingdom, but now it’s available in 52 countries worldwide, HPE announced on Wednesday at its HPE Discover Frankfurt 2022 conference in Germany.
HPE’s support for AWS’ Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) Anywhere will enable enterprises who are AWS customers to use the same container environment in their private cloud and run containerized apps in a hybrid cloud environment, said Bryan Thompson, vice president of product management of HPE GreenLake Cloud Services Solutions.
“If I‘m a big AWS shop, I can now deploy those same workloads the same way on an HPE GreenLake private cloud instance. I can connect those environments or run them separately, but the key is they are running the same underlying Kubernetes,” Thompson said in an interview with Data Center Knowledge.
HPE’s announcements Wednesday are the company’s latest updates to its GreenLake platform, the company’s on-premises solutions that are offered through a cloudlike, subscription-based, as a service model, in which customers don’t have to own or manage the equipment.
HPE was among the first hardware providers to announce plans to make its products available as a service, and its success prompted other hardware makers, including Dell and Cisco, to pursue similar strategies. HPE executives on Wednesday said HPE continues to gain customer traction with GreenLake adoption reaching $8.3 billion in contract value, up from $7.1 billion six months ago.
Analysts say HPE is continuing to round out its GreenLake portfolio of services with Wednesday’s announcements. Since launching GreenLake, HPE has methodically added new services over time, such as disaster recovery and Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) as a service, said Rob Brothers, program vice president of IDC’s data center and support services.