this post was submitted on 17 Apr 2024
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I'd sue them if I had the perpetual license. Their only options should be to go out of business, support the product in the way it was promised and purchased, or buy the licenses back for the same cost as 20 years of their subscription product would cost (which is dirt cheap compared to perpetual).
Honestly, unless they have some kind of concrete guarantees sufficient to ensure that a customer is happy (like service providers with N% uptime guarantees), I think that trying to force someone to support something that they don't want to support is a dead end. There's too much wiggle room in what they need to do.
What are the alternatives for people in this enviornment?
I use qemu when I virtualize things. I assume that there's some company out there that provides commercial support for it and tools for deploying and managing tons of VMs.
Proxmox. Microsoft has Hyper-V and Windows Storage. Oracle has VirtualBox but lol no. There’s also OpenStack that has a whole bunch of stuff to it, and of course you could just orchestrate Debian with Terraform, Ansible, Chef, Puppet, etc.
EDIT: Oh and I almost forgot Citrix