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Netframe is now Generally Available!
February 3, 2026
We shipped General Availability for Netframe quietly in late December. That moment mattered to us. Not because “GA” is a checkbox, but because it marked the point where the platform was ready to run real workloads with confidence.
Now, in early 2026, we’re officially stepping into the market.
The virtual machine platform landscape has changed significantly. vSphere, the most widely used virtual infrastructure platform on the planet, changed hands. The result for many customers has been sharp cost increases, tighter ecosystem control, and a lot of uncertainty.
As businesses struggle to find direction on what to do next, we wanted to provide a safe harbour in this storm of uncertainty. Netframe is simple to deploy, intuitive to operate, and designed to scale without the legacy tax. If you’re comfortable with vSphere, you’ll feel right at home with Netframe. Migrate your VMs to Netframe with our Converter tool, and protect them with Netframe Backup. Netframe is built to solve today’s problem by giving organisations a clear path forward right now. At the same time, we’re investing in a roadmap of platform capabilities that help businesses continue modernising without piling on operational complexity and technical debt.
Netframe uses KVM as the virtualisation engine. KVM is a proven, widely deployed component with a long history of stability in production. But running the VMs is only one part of the story. What makes Netframe... Netframe, is everything else we have built into the stack. A straightforward installer, clustering and High Availability, an easy-to-use UI, a clean REST API, role-based access control with multi-tenancy capabilities are all built in, with much more to come.
It’s also worth saying that GA doesn’t mean “finished”. This first release is the starting line. Some areas are intentionally lean today, and we’ll keep closing gaps as the platform evolves, guided by real-world use and customer feedback.
One capability we know many teams care about is storage. Currently we provide an easy method through our UI and API, to have shared NFS storage provisioned to hosts, however we know that many organisations want to leverage existing SAN fabrics or implement software defined storage. Rest assured additional storage capabilities is a priority on our roadmap, and we’re working towards an approach that adheres to Netframe principles: meaning it should be intuitive to implement and easy to manage.
Our late December release was the culmination of a long build cycle, and it’s also where the real work begins. We already have our first production deployment running in the field, with a success-store case study coming soon. In 2026 we shift from build to rollout. That means evaluations, early adopters, and partnerships with teams who want an on-prem path that doesn’t feel like a trap.
If you’re reassessing your virtualisation roadmap this year, whether it’s cost, lock-in, operational burden, or future flexibility, we’d love to show you what Netframe looks like in practice. Reach out to arrange a demo.
Now, in early 2026, we’re officially stepping into the market.
The virtual machine platform landscape has changed significantly. vSphere, the most widely used virtual infrastructure platform on the planet, changed hands. The result for many customers has been sharp cost increases, tighter ecosystem control, and a lot of uncertainty.
As businesses struggle to find direction on what to do next, we wanted to provide a safe harbour in this storm of uncertainty. Netframe is simple to deploy, intuitive to operate, and designed to scale without the legacy tax. If you’re comfortable with vSphere, you’ll feel right at home with Netframe. Migrate your VMs to Netframe with our Converter tool, and protect them with Netframe Backup. Netframe is built to solve today’s problem by giving organisations a clear path forward right now. At the same time, we’re investing in a roadmap of platform capabilities that help businesses continue modernising without piling on operational complexity and technical debt.
Netframe uses KVM as the virtualisation engine. KVM is a proven, widely deployed component with a long history of stability in production. But running the VMs is only one part of the story. What makes Netframe... Netframe, is everything else we have built into the stack. A straightforward installer, clustering and High Availability, an easy-to-use UI, a clean REST API, role-based access control with multi-tenancy capabilities are all built in, with much more to come.
It’s also worth saying that GA doesn’t mean “finished”. This first release is the starting line. Some areas are intentionally lean today, and we’ll keep closing gaps as the platform evolves, guided by real-world use and customer feedback.
One capability we know many teams care about is storage. Currently we provide an easy method through our UI and API, to have shared NFS storage provisioned to hosts, however we know that many organisations want to leverage existing SAN fabrics or implement software defined storage. Rest assured additional storage capabilities is a priority on our roadmap, and we’re working towards an approach that adheres to Netframe principles: meaning it should be intuitive to implement and easy to manage.
Our late December release was the culmination of a long build cycle, and it’s also where the real work begins. We already have our first production deployment running in the field, with a success-store case study coming soon. In 2026 we shift from build to rollout. That means evaluations, early adopters, and partnerships with teams who want an on-prem path that doesn’t feel like a trap.
If you’re reassessing your virtualisation roadmap this year, whether it’s cost, lock-in, operational burden, or future flexibility, we’d love to show you what Netframe looks like in practice. Reach out to arrange a demo.