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Data Storage

Novell Buys Software Maker PlateSpin for $205 Million

Novell Buys Software Maker PlateSpin for $205 Million
February 26, 2008 2:38PM

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PlateSpin's products are expected to fit into Novell's virtualization strategy for data centers. Novell expects the $205 million PlateSpin deal will fill some holes in Novell's management of workloads in the data center. PlateSpin is also expected to provide Novell customers with a solution for recovering from disasters.


Novell has agreed to pay $205 million in cash to acquire Toronto-based PlateSpin, which provides software resources for the management of heterogeneous data Relevant Products/Services-center workloads on a single physical or virtual Relevant Products/Services host.

PlateSpin's software portfolio is expected to serve as a cornerstone for Novell's virtualization Relevant Products/Services strategy for delivering the next generation of infrastructure Relevant Products/Services software needed to power Relevant Products/Services tomorrow's data center, Novell executives said.

"Together, we will have the most comprehensive workload Relevant Products/Services-management solution that allows customers to monitor and analyze what to virtualize, provide the tools to seamlessly virtualize and unvirtualize workloads, automate the management of workloads, and provide the leading open-source platform from which to run virtualized Relevant Products/Services work," said Novell Chief Executive Ron Hovsepian.

From the Ground Up

PlateSpin's technologies are designed to improve both the speed and quality of server Relevant Products/Services consolidation Relevant Products/Services, data-center relocation, and disaster recovery. Once the deal closes, Novell expects to offer its customers tools for moving physical workloads to Xen-based virtual machines running on SUSE Linux Relevant Products/Services Enterprise as well as other virtual platforms provided by Citrix, Microsoft Relevant Products/Services, VMware and other vendors.

Novell's virtualization platform had been missing some key virtualization capabilities, noted Chief Marketing Officer John Dragoon. For example, there was no "good way to assess and monitor which workloads were candidates for virtualization" or stream "virtual and physical workloads," Dragoon said.

Novell's platform also needed "an elegant and affordable method for enabling businesses to recover from disasters" as well as protect their data-center workloads from unplanned outages, Dragoon said. "PlateSpin's PowerRecon, PowerConvert and Forge products are designed from the ground up to handle those important tasks," he said.

Automated Management

With its acquisition of PlateSpin's technology, Novell said it will be able to provide IT Relevant Products/Services departments with a fully integrated product suite that automates data-center initiatives such as server consolidation, relocation and hardware Relevant Products/Services upgrades. PlateSpin's disaster-recovery offerings are also expected to help Novell optimize Relevant Products/Services the balance between physical and virtual infrastructures by automatically making adjustments based on server availability and workload demand, Dragoon said. (continued...)

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