SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Servers and Mainframes

Novell buys Toronto virtualization firm PlateSpin

Novell buys Toronto virtualization firm PlateSpin

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 25 Feb 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

A company best known for software to manage multiple server instances will add to Novell's ZenWorks line of products. Info-Tech looks at the commoditization of a niche

PlateSpin is a “well-regarded” company, he said, whose physical-to-virtual migration products are widely used. “Outside of what’s offered by VMware, PlateSpin is the tool I come across as being used most often,” he said.

Data centre managers who bought PlateSpin products in part because of its hypervisor-neutral strategy may now have second thoughts, Sloan said. However, he noted Novell said it won’t be integrating PlateSpin products into its offerings yet.

PlateSpin founder and CEO Stephen Pollack agreed there should be no concern. In fact, he added, buyers should be reassured that the company will be bought by one with a big balance sheet. It’s hard for a privately-held venture-backed company to spread globally, he said, one reason he went for the Novell offer. PlateSpin had revenues last year of about $20 million, compared to publicly-traded Novell’s revenues of about US$1 billion.

IT managers should also see the deal as a sign of PlateSpin’s “re-commitment … to a multiplatform data centre,” he said, because that’s Novell’s strategy.

After studying math and computer science at Queen’s University, Pollack worked for Fulcrum Technologies for 10 years in both development and non-development posts before joining FloNetworks, a Toronto direct marketing and e-mail applications service provider, as vice-president of product management. He left after it was bought in 2000 by DoubleClick.

In 2003, Pollack and several others build PlateSpin to help IT managers bring new technologies such as virtualization and blade computing into the data centre by automating procedures.

PlateSpin’s customers include the AXA Group, a Paris-based financial conglomerate, Missouri-based Commerce Bank and the city of Montreal. It has sales offices in the U.S., the U.K, Germany, France and Australia.

Novell has been a technology partner of PlateSpin’s for several years. PlateSpin CEO and founder Stephen Pollack said Novell first approached his company about a deal in September.

For the time being Novell plans to keep the PlateSpin name. It doesn’t plan at the moment to convert any of its software to open source. PlateSpin will continue selling largely through its 20 Canadian system integrators, such as Calgary’s Long View Systems and Thornhill, Ont.’s Onx Enterprise Solutions.

It also has a direct sales staff for named accounts. Pollack estimated that 70 per cent of its Canadian sales are through the channel. In addition to facing VMware’s tools, Novell now competes in virtualization management with Microsoft’s System Centre, the newly-merged management centre about to appear in Windows Server 2008. However, it will be another several months when Micrsoft’s Hyper-V hypervisor is released, to give it a full set of tools.










Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 2457   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more

Related Content

Novell’s new Spin on virtual workflow management
Novell’s new Spin on virtual workflow managementThe PlateSpin line evolves and joins ZenWorks in a more comprehensive virtualization management suite
Novell says ZenWorks key to Fossa Project success
Novell says ZenWorks key to Fossa Project successThe company's systems management software will help turn compute infrastructure into something more collaborative, according to president and CEO Ron Hovespian. The Canadian CTO highlights the local benefits
Server apps prompt physical/virtual juggling act
Server apps prompt physical/virtual juggling actToronto-based PlateSpin teams up with Virutal Iron to more efficiently manage workloads once virtualization technologies have been applied in the data centre. Get a handle on mixed environments
Does Virtualization Equal ‘Bullet Proof’?
virtualization has been available to the it world for more than four decades, yet it has still not really taken off in the multi system environment.  many vendors are pushing this approach to deploying ‘flexible technology’, yet it still has not emerged beyond the ‘glass house’ of the data centers or server closets.  ibm i
Users “very confident” in virtualization management tools a minority: survey
many organizations feel unprepared to face the challenges associated with managing physical and virtual it environments, according to a recent study.the emc corp. survey polled more than 150 it business professionals and found that a mere 24 per cent of respondents expressed that they were “very confident” that their current management tools are sufficient to maintain existing it servic
What virtualization will cost you today (and tomorrow)
virtualization has become this year’s green it. as vmworld kicks off in las vegas this week, i find myself so sick to death of hearing about technology that allows multiple instances of software to run on a single machine that i almost can’t bear to pay attention to it. this morning alone vmware unleashed nearly a dozen announcements. last week, perhaps sensing they would be ignore
blog comments powered by Disqus