Enterprise software vendor Novell
announced yesterday it had entered into a definitive agreement to acquire
datacentre management vendor PlateSpin
for $205 million. The deal is due to close in Q2 of Novell’s financial year at
the end of April.
Novell chief executive and president, Ron Hovsepian said in a statement that
acquiring PlateSpin would put Novell in a unique position to deliver next
generation datacentres, "The PlateSpin acquisition will be a cornerstone of our
two-pronged enterprise Linux and IT management software strategy."
PlateSpin chief executive officer Stephen Pollack commented that PlateSpin
always had an agnostic approach to firms’ virtualisation infrastructure and
could work with Mac systems and using alternative Linux distributions such as
Red Hat.
Novell senior vice president for systems and resource management (SRM) Joe
Wagner said that PlateSpin, "Would be integrated into the SRM unit which I
manage, but both partner programmes would continue to develop and market their
solutions to their respective customer bases. PlateSpin's Toronto facility would
continue to operate."
However, Quocirca service director for business process analysis Clive
Longbottom has reservations about the deal, saying that PlateSpin runs the risk
of being lost within Novell's portfolio, “Novell and marketing are two words
that have never appeared in the same library, never mind the same book.”
PlateSpin has three products, one of which was a hardware appliance called
Forge, due to be introduced into the EMEA region this week. The Forge disaster
recovery appliance allows datacentre managers to protect and recover both
physical and virtual server workloads in the event of unplanned downtime or even
a site disaster.
The two software systems, PowerConvert and PowerRecon give firms the capacity to
optimise datacentres through being able to 'drag and drop' workloads onto,
physical or virtual hosts, as well as providing inventory and utilisation
metrics useful for firms planning datacentre initiatives.
Longbottom pointed out that the company has great virtualisation technology
but their offerings “would have been a good fit for someone like a BMC, IBM
(Tivoli) or CA (Unicenter).
Novell hopes the acquisition will give them an advantage for firms running
mixed environments and are aiming to offer, "Complete workload lifecycle
management for Linux, Unix and Windows systems."
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