We've been teaching virtualization since containers became mainstream
Starting back in 2020, we saw how VMware and Proxmox were reshaping infrastructure. Our courses evolved from those early experiments with Docker and hypervisors.
Now we help professionals across the country understand virtualization from practical experience, not just theory.
How we built this from real infrastructure problems
The idea started when a few of us were working with virtualization deployments that kept breaking in weird ways. Training materials back then were either oversimplified or impossibly dense.
We started documenting what actually worked. Those notes turned into workshops. Those workshops grew into structured courses covering VMware guides that addressed real deployment scenarios.
By 2022, we had professionals from different regions asking for remote access to this knowledge. So we rebuilt everything for online delivery without losing the hands-on feel.
Today, we teach both group sessions and individual courses. Some people learn better with others. Some need focused attention on specific infrastructure challenges. Both approaches work because we design them around virtualization scenarios you'll actually face.
Our Memphis office coordinates everything, but learners connect from all over. Regional differences in infrastructure setups actually make discussions richer.
What makes our approach different
Real Infrastructure Focus
We don't teach theory without context. Every concept connects to actual deployment scenarios with Proxmox and VMware configurations you'll use.
Flexible Learning Paths
Choose group sessions for collaborative problem-solving or individual courses for targeted skill development. Switch between formats as your needs change.
Containerization Integration
We teach how virtualization and containers work together. Most infrastructures use both, so our courses reflect that reality from the start.
Regional Adaptability
Learners from different parts of the country bring different infrastructure contexts. We adapt examples to match diverse deployment environments.
Live Instructor Interaction
All sessions include direct access to instructors who've deployed these systems in production. Questions get answered based on actual experience.
Personalized Progress
Track your development through real projects. We adjust course pace and depth based on your background and where you're trying to go.
Timeline: From Infrastructure Notes to National Platform
Started with documentation
We began compiling notes from VMware deployments that kept hitting the same issues. Those became internal training materials for our team.
First workshops launched
Local professionals asked to join our training sessions. We formalized the content and started teaching container integration with traditional virtualization.
Went fully remote
Rebuilt everything for online delivery. Added both group learning paths and individual instruction options to accommodate different learning styles.
Expanded Proxmox curriculum
Added comprehensive Proxmox guides based on learner demand. Integrated hands-on labs that mirror production environments.
National reach established
Now teaching learners from across the country with adapted content for different regional infrastructure approaches. Continuous enrollment available.
What drives our teaching philosophy
We believe the best way to learn virtualization is by working with systems that behave like real infrastructure. Sanitized examples don't prepare you for production environments.
That's why our courses use actual configurations from VMware and Proxmox deployments. You'll troubleshoot issues that happen in the field, not theoretical scenarios.
- Hands-on labs with virtual infrastructure that mirrors production setups you'll encounter
- Group collaboration where learners solve problems together, sharing different approaches
- Individual mentoring for focused skill development in specific areas of virtualization
- Real deployment scenarios from VMware vSphere to Proxmox VE configurations
- Container integration showing how Docker and Kubernetes fit with traditional hypervisors