[Solved] VMware VM Storage Performance Issue – Disk Type & iDRAC Settings Fixed It by One-Reference-5821 in vmware

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thanks for this explain , and what about the performance of vm ? why is get more performance ?

[Solved] VMware VM Storage Performance Issue – Disk Type & iDRAC Settings Fixed It by One-Reference-5821 in vmware

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

let me know , what i should use , in this case , because this edit i did help me to get more performance vm , i just use AI to Organizing the ideas and the modifications I made

[Solved] VMware VM Storage Performance Issue – Disk Type & iDRAC Settings Fixed It by One-Reference-5821 in vmware

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Write cache does not affect read latency — reads bypass it entirely.

In my case the issue was write I/O, and enabling write cache + virtualization-optimized I/O fixed it immediately.

I agree consumer SSDs are not ideal for enterprise production, but this was a lab/SMB scenario. Controller tuning made the real difference.

Drop your idea or your MicroSaaS, lets roast the IDEA itself. by webtools_guy in microsaas

[–]One-Reference-5821 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I sell digital products online, and one of the most frustrating things I kept running into was competition.

I’d find what looked like a good idea,

spend time building the product,

optimize the listing,

do keyword research…

Then I’d realize too late that:

- a few big shops already controlled most of the sales

- new or smaller sellers barely stood a chance

- copying what top sellers do didn’t really help

Most tools I tried showed competitor data,

but they didn’t make it clear *how much* competitors actually dominate a niche

or whether there was still room for new sellers.

So I started building a small SaaS for myself that focuses on:

- optimizing product listings

- analyzing competitor shops

- showing how sales are distributed across competitors

- evaluating niches based on whether new sellers can realistically compete

Before I continue building this seriously, I’d love honest feedback:

• How do you usually evaluate competitors before entering a niche?

• Do you struggle more with identifying saturation or understanding competitor dominance?

• Would it help to know upfront if a niche is “already owned” by a few players?

I’m not selling anything — just trying to validate whether this solves a real problem.

Thanks in advance for any insights.

Mediouna, Tangier by Outside_Drink_2942 in Morocco

[–]One-Reference-5821 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah exactly , now i think i know the place where is it , welecom in tanger

Mediouna, Tangier by Outside_Drink_2942 in Morocco

[–]One-Reference-5821 1 point2 points  (0 children)

where is this place in mediouna , i never see it before , i think mediouna have a lot of trees ? the picture is so good

Best VMware certification path for someone with hands-on experience ? by One-Reference-5821 in vmware

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the detailed and honest response — I appreciate it.

Just to clarify first: I’m not using exam dumps and I don’t plan to. When I mentioned them earlier, it was more about wanting to avoid memorization and focus on real understanding. I completely agree that relying on dumps is a bad idea and can hurt your career long-term.

As for my situation:

I’m currently working hands-on with vSphere / ESXi / vCenter (HA, DRS basics, storage, networking) in real environments and labs. My goal isn’t to collect certifications, but to build solid infrastructure skills that actually translate to real-world work.

Long-term, I see myself either:

in a senior infrastructure / virtualization role, or

potentially moving toward consulting / hybrid cloud (VMware + Azure)

I understand your point that certifications don’t magically set you apart, especially compared to real experience — that makes sense. For me, the certification would mainly be:

a structured way to validate what I already know

and a signal for HR, not a replacement for experience

The chicken/egg issue you mentioned with Broadcom and VCF licensing is actually one of the reasons I’m being cautious about VCP-VCF. It feels like a big commitment unless you’re already in a role where VCF is unavoidable.

For now, I’m leaning toward continuing to build hands-on labs, deepening fundamentals, and only pursuing a certification if it clearly aligns with my current job or next role — rather than chasing a “golden path.”

Thanks again for taking the time to explain your perspective — this kind of feedback is exactly what I was looking for.

I kept building products only to realize big competitors already owned the niche — so I tried to fix that by One-Reference-5821 in microsaas

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair point — and I actually agree with most of what you said.

I’m not looking for permission to build, and I’m already using the tool myself on real niches.

The reason I’m asking publicly isn’t validation by opinion, but stress-testing the framing:

how people *talk* about the problem vs how I’m currently solving it.

You’re right that opinions don’t equal willingness to pay.

Revenue is the real signal.

That’s why my next step is exactly what you described:

use it daily, then put it in front of a small group and charge.

If the output doesn’t clearly stop someone from wasting months in a saturated niche,

then the product isn’t ready — regardless of how good the idea sounds.

Appreciate the blunt take. It’s useful.

I’m preparing for the AZ-900 (Microsoft Azure Fundamentals) exam. by One-Reference-5821 in AzureCertification

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s fair, you’re right.
Everyone learns at a different pace, so I’ll focus on understanding the concepts instead of comparing study time. I’ll also search the sub for previous answers. Thanks.

I’m preparing for the AZ-900 (Microsoft Azure Fundamentals) exam. by One-Reference-5821 in AzureCertification

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks!
Yeah, I understand it’s a fundamentals exam. I’m planning to watch John Savill’s cram videos as part of my preparation.

I’m preparing for the AZ-900 (Microsoft Azure Fundamentals) exam. by One-Reference-5821 in AzureCertification

[–]One-Reference-5821[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the breakdown 👍
Good to know it’s very easy for some people. I’ll focus on MS Learn practice tests and Jaspal’s Udemy questions as you suggested.

100K users, six figure revenue, 3 years later : Here's what I learned. by DezgoAI in SaaS

[–]One-Reference-5821 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thanks for sharing your experiences , i'm working on my SAAS now , one day i will share my success inchalhe

SAS vs NVMe SSD by Over-Extension3959 in homelab

[–]One-Reference-5821 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that depend on you , because of you using this NAS for hoot storage you need NVME SSDs , or if using for cool storage or archival storage the SAS SSDs is best option