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Proxmox Datacenter Manager 1.1 Feels Like the Missing Pane of Glass, But Not Everyone Needs the Window
June 20, 2026
2 min read read
# Proxmox Datacenter Manager 1.1 Feels Like the Missing Pane of Glass, But Not Everyone Needs the Window
Proxmox Datacenter Manager 1.1 landed with the kind of quiet announcement that sounds boring until you realize how many people have been waiting for exactly this shape of tool. The promise is simple: a central place to watch and manage multiple Proxmox environments without forcing everything into one big cluster. That distinction matters. A lot of home labs and small shops don’t need full-blown high availability, shared storage, or live migration across every machine. They just want one screen that says, “Here’s what’s alive, here’s what’s busy, and here’s where your VMs are.” The reaction was grateful, curious, and just skeptical enough to be useful.
## The Single-Cluster Crowd Isn’t Fully Sold
The first split was obvious: people with one cluster looked at Datacenter Manager and asked, “Do I actually need this?” For some, the answer was a pretty blunt no. One person running a single three-node cluster said it looked cool and clearly had a target audience, but they didn’t see much reason to use it in that setup. Another put it even colder: with only a couple of clusters, it might just waste resources unless the goal is learning. That’s not hate. It’s a fair read. If Proxmox already gives you a clean cluster view, adding a manager on top ca
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