If you search “LaCie VMware” today, you’ll still find fresh posts — because every year, someone buys a shiny new LaCie RAID, tries to run their coding VM on it, and learns the hard way.

Here’s the “long story” of and VMware — not because they’re directly related products, but because they’ve been intertwined in a specific, painful, and educational way for IT pros, video editors, and VMware homelab users over the years. The Short Version (TL;DR) People search “LaCie VMware” when their LaCie external drive (often a big, fast Thunderbolt or USB-C RAID) causes VMware virtual machines to corrupt, stutter, or fail — especially when VM disk files (VMDKs) are stored on the LaCie. The problem isn’t just speed; it’s power management, USB quirks, and drive firmware fighting with VMware’s low-level disk access. The Long Story 1. The Allure of LaCie for VMware Users LaCie (now part of Seagate’s premium brand) makes rugged, fast, beautiful external drives. A video editor or developer might think: “I’ll run my VMware VMs off this LaCie 4TB RAID over Thunderbolt — it’s faster than my internal SSD.”

Need help recovering a VM from a corrupted LaCie? That’s another long story (involves vmdk repair tools and a lot of luck).

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