VMware Workstation and Fusion Pro desktop hypervisors are now free for personal use

Alfonso Maruccia

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What just happened? IT giant Broadcom is increasing its efforts to turn the majority of its business into a subscription-only model. After taking over virtualization specialist VMware, the sprawling multinational conglomerate is now giving away VMware desktop applications to end customers and lone professionals.

While the company was still busy assimilating VMware's virtualization business, Broadcom confirmed in 2023 that the line of Workstation desktop virtualization software wasn't going anywhere. Workstation will be part of VMware even after the Broadcom acquisition, although license conditions will change.

As announced by VMware product manager Michael Roy, the "Pro" editions of the Workstation desktop hypervisors are now free for personal use for owners of Windows, Linux, and Mac systems. Workstation Pro and Workstation Fusion Pro for Mac will essentially replace the previously available free editions of VMware desktop hypervisors for PC (Workstation Player) and Mac (Fusion Player).

Shortcuts: Download VMware Player | Download VMware Workstation

Workstation and Fusion provide an easy way to create and manage virtual machines from a desktop PC for testing different operating systems and applications with potential security risks. Roy said that the desktop hypervisors are the first VMware products that many professionals have ever used, and they remain important tools for practicing virtualization as well as learning the fundamentals of the vSphere platform.

While end users will be able to employ the unrestricted Workstation Pro applications to create and manage virtualized operating systems, professional users will still need to pay their fair share to get the same results. Broadcom is now offering a single, subscription-based option for using the hypervisors in a commercial environment. This eliminates the more than 40 Workstation products that were previously available through VMware resellers, Roy said.

The new subscription can be purchased from any Broadcom Advantage partner. A new reseller, Digital River, has been brought to support customers that don't have a pre-existing commercial account. Workstation Pro subscriptions will cost $120 per year; previously available perpetual licenses cost $195. Downloads for free editions of Workstation hypervisors are available through Broadcom's new support portal, which requires user registration (or just use TechSpot downloads).

Workstation and Fusion brought an "immeasurable value" to the virtualization community over the past 25 years, VMware said, and they will keep providing one of the most powerful VM platform out there for the foreseeable future. Workstation heritage can be dated back to the very first product VMware ever shipped, which was simply called "VMware 1.0" back in 1999.

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I'm sure they're doing this to counter balance all the hate they got for jacking up prices on all their business software.
 
Great, no more need to bother with Virtualbox.

In my not-so-humble experience, Virtuabox is one of the worst software products I have ever tried. VM-wise, anyway. I was literally blown away (minus the windy disaster) by how much better my converted Windows VMs ran under VMware Workstation Player...
 
In my not-so-humble experience, Virtuabox is one of the worst software products I have ever tried. VM-wise, anyway. I was literally blown away (minus the windy disaster) by how much better my converted Windows VMs ran under VMware Workstation Player...

I wouldn't say it's the worst of anything but it's never been a standout. Between VMware Workstation, Fusion, KVM/libvirt, HyperV, 86Box, Dosbox and Parallels there's almost always a better choice for any particular purpose.
 
In my not-so-humble experience, Virtuabox is one of the worst software products I have ever tried. VM-wise, anyway. I was literally blown away (minus the windy disaster) by how much better my converted Windows VMs ran under VMware Workstation Player...
I had the same kind of moment with HyperV that's included with Windows Pro versions.
 
In my not-so-humble experience, Virtuabox is one of the worst software products I have ever tried. VM-wise, anyway. I was literally blown away (minus the windy disaster) by how much better my converted Windows VMs ran under VMware Workstation Player...
windows' hyper v is much faster than vmware player because it's kernel native type 1 hypervisor.
and it's available for free since windows 8 pro.
 
windows' hyper v is much faster than vmware player because it's kernel native type 1 hypervisor.
and it's available for free since windows 8 pro.
However, type 1 hypervisor makes everything else runs slower, because effectively they are all virtualized now. I was pretty excited to try Hyper-V, but have to revert everything back in a week. Otherwise, my Android emulator performance is horrible and a few other applications can't handle nested VM environment at all. Enabling Hyper-V also had some odd bug that caused my GPU to be stuck at minimal frequency randomly until reboot.

I liked the background VM capability of Hyper-V, and looks like I'm getting it back with the now free workstation pro. :) Meanwhile, the seamless mode seems to be broken for workstation pro...
 
Smart of them. I mean, people aren't going to get any experience with vmware's products if they have to pay for a subscription to do so.
 
I imagine Nutanix and Microsoft, are going to pull in a lot of new business from organizations jumping ship from Broadcom's hot garbage take over of VMware.....
 
I can imagine the next step will be to make VMWare free for educational use as well, try to corner the market the same way M$, Autodesk and Photoshop have.

We're already planning on how we are going to dump our VMWare clusters once our current support ESX hardware goes EOL, they can go and eat a bag of d*cks.
 
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