VMWare has made Workstation Pro and Fusion Pro free for personal use, allowing home users and students to set up their own virtualized test labs and play with another operating system at little to no cost.
Things have been a little shaky since Broadcom completed its acquisition of VMware in November for $61 billion, with the company announcing the divestiture of its End-User Computing (EUC) Division, the end of perpetual licensing, and discontinuation of the free vSphere Hypervisor (ESXi) offering.
However, we have some good news for a change, with VMware announcing yesterday that VMware Workstation Pro and Fusion Pro are now free for personal use.
"The most exciting part is that Fusion Pro and Workstation Pro will now have two license models. We now provide a Free Personal Use or a Paid Commercial Use subscription for our Pro apps," explains Michael Roy, Product Manager for Desktop Hypervisor products, in a new announcement.
"Users will decide based on their use case whether a commercial subscription is required."
"This means that everyday users who want a virtual lab on their Mac, Windows or Linux computer can do so for free simply by registering and downloading the bits from the new download portal located at support.broadcom.com"
After registering a Broadcom account, you can download VMware Fusion Pro and VMware Workstation Pro. When installing the products, you will be greeted with a screen asking if you use the product for personal use or in a commercial setting.
You must enter a purchased license key if you use it in a business. However, for personal users, you can simply select that option, and it will install with all its standard features with no limitations.
With their full-featured products now free, VMware says they are discontinuing Workstation Player and Fusion Player, and they are no longer available for purchase.
However, as the VMs used in Player are compatible with their Workstation Pro and Fusion Pro counterparts, there should be no issues upgrading to the full-featured versions.
For those using VMware Player products, the company has provided instructions on upgrading to the Pro versions.
Current Product | Going Forward |
Workstation Player (personal) | Download and install the Workstation Pro personal use product. Workstation Player will continue to be bundled with Workstation Pro just as it is today. |
Fusion Player (personal) | Update to Fusion 13.5.2 and delete your license key file. This will remove the ‘Player’ functionality limitation and unlock the “Pro for Personal Use” functionality without needing any additional keys. Here is a KB describing what to do: http://kb.vmware.com/s/article/97817 |
Fusion Player 13 and Workstation Player 17 (commercial license) | Player Products will continue to function, no new license keys are required. Products will continue to be supported for existing customers in alignment with their existing End of Life and End of General Support dates (for more information visit here) Recommended upgrade to Pro products going forward for continued support and product enhancements. |
Roy says these changes are being made to simplify how the company offers its desktop hypervisor products.
"With the new commercial model, we have reduced our product group offerings down to a single SKU for users who require commercial use licensing," explains Roy.
"This simplification eliminates 40+ other SKUs and makes quoting and purchasing VMware Desktop Hypervisor apps, Fusion Pro and Workstation Pro, easier than ever."
Comments
ZeroYourHero - 1 month ago
This could be bad news for Oracle and VirtualBox if they had plans to charge for it in the future.
b1k3rdude - 1 month ago
meh, I would say not really. VMP for example has always had superior GPU emulation compared to VB.
electrolite - 1 month ago
"This could be bad news for Oracle and VirtualBox if they had plans to charge for it in the future."
VirtualBox has been around for long enough so this doesn't do anything to them. Oracle owns them so they are in for the long game even if it does not generate much revenue. In fact the only reason VM Pro is now free for personal use is because Broadcom realized everyone was jumping ship and heading over to VirtualBox when they pulled the rug underneath everyone.
Adoption is very important and VMWare (and most software companies) knew that. Broadcom on the other hand does not share that philosophy and will only change course after their bottom line starts taking a hit.
Gisabun - 1 month ago
Unless you are new or you have issues with what you are using now, nothing will change.
0Willy - 1 month ago
Good if I could create an account to download it.
Gisabun - 1 month ago
I have an account but I originally put in a hyphen for the company name and was accepted. Now I have to go through some trade registration form and it won't proceed to download as the company field requires 2 or more characters and I can't edit it.
A solution is to search the Internet for the EXE and just make sure the digital signature is valid.
0Willy - 1 month ago
... or use a the vmware direct download link: https://softwareupdate.vmware.com/cds/vmw-desktop/ws/17.5.2/23775571/windows/core/
FWIW VirusTotal says nobody flagged it malicious, but you should always verify yourself.
0day - 1 month ago
Server is down :/
b1k3rdude - 1 month ago
Whats the catch? get people used to using pro and then pull the rug by changing the terms down the line...This is qaulcomm were are talking about here and they have already pulled this sh*t with ESX server...
I've been using VMPlayer for years and upgrading to pro is only a minor upgrade.