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Rove Mobile offers 'by-the-administrator' pricing

Rove Mobile offers 'by-the-administrator' pricing

By:   On: 21 Apr 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Licensing by the user, not the server, means the remote network administration software company will get into more servers, Rove's CTO says. But one analyst wonders whether admins would rather opt for cheap or free options

On Tuesday, Rove Inc. announced a new version of its mobile network administration software, but the biggest change may be in the way it’s licensed, not in the code.

Mobile Admin 4.0 allows network administrators to manage their servers from any computer or smart phone, according to Paul Dumais, chief technology officer for Ottawa-based Rove. But the new version licenses the administrator, not the server software.

“It allows people to administer an unlimited number of servers,” Dumais said. Whereas before, companies would pay $245 per server, they now pay $495 per administrator. The software is installed on a single server on the network; there are no agents on any of the other machines.

The licensing change came about because customers weren’t buying licences for their non-critical servers. “Let’s say a customer had 100 servers,” Dumais said. “They would only buy 10 licences of our software for 10 servers. They bought it for the critical servers they had to manage, but not the entire set of servers they have in the organization. We think the licensing change gives a lot more value to our customers, and basically allows them to manage their entire infrastructure.”

The new licensing regimen makes more sense for a company in Rove’s position – looking for revenue growth – according to Info-Tech Research Group senior analyst Mark Tauschek.

For a start, many mid-sized firms would balk at paying $245 a server for a large number of servers. “A data centre or network administrator is going to be responsible for more than one server,” Tauschek said, so by-the-administrator (or by-the-device) licensing is more attractive.

It’s also good for Rove’s bottom line. “As people add new administrators, it means additional licensing revenue,” Dumais said. “You’re more often going to be adding administrators than you’re going to be adding critical servers.”

Rove, recently named one of Canada’s hottest new mobile companies by IDC Canada, has two streams of products. One is aimed at end-users who want to access their office or home computer remotely. The other stream targets network administrators who want to work remotely. Mobile Admin falls into that stream, and covers Windows-based administration environments; a sister product, Mobile SSH, allows remote management for Unix admins running terminal-based systems like AS/400s, mainframes and green-screen applications, Dumais said.

Mobile Admin supports Microsoft Active Directory and Exchange, Lotus Domino, BlackBerry Enterprise Server, Oracle, Citrix, VMware, Novell GroupWise and more. “It actually does about 400 tasks,” Dumais said. “It’s really a unified management suite so people can manage their entire infrastructure.”


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