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Will Sun's Q-Layer deal end its cloudy days?

Will Sun's Q-Layer deal end its cloudy days?

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 06 Jan 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Sun continued to bolster its newly created cloud computing business unit with its acquisition of Belgium-based Q-Layer. Find out if the cloud computing management and orchestration technology start-up will fit into the company’s plans

Sun Microsystems Inc.’s purchase of Belgium-based cloud computing vendor Q-Layer NV could be the first step in rescuing the company from declining revenues and a struggling hardware business, according to industry observers.

The server and storage giant said Q-Layer’s technology will allow it to deliver simplified cloud management and instant provisioning of servers, storage, bandwidth and software for private and public cloud computing environments. According to Sun, making cloud management easier and speeding up application deployment times will enable users the ability scale their own environments to meet their specific requirements.

Sun did not disclose the financial terms of the purchase, but said the value of the deal would have little to no impact on the company.

Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT Research Inc., said that application deployment and management is a critical area of cloud computing and a very complex technology to develop in-house. The acquisition, he said, fits in nicely with Sun’s other integrated data centre offerings, such as Project BlackBox and its data centre design and construction business.

“The larger enterprises as well as the hosted service providers are the first organizations that are likely to buy into the cloud idea,” he said. “It’s important for Sun to chase or produce a competitive offering in this where it can.”

Jean Bozman, research vice-president of enterprise servers at IDC Corp., said that cloud computing efforts from companies like IBM Corp. have looked at cloud enablement by leveraging virtualization technologies. Some vendors have also begun outlining how they are going to provision the software stacks that get put onto the hypervisor, she said.

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“That’s what allows for on-demand scale-up,” she said. “By pushing more of these software stacks through virtualization and then provisioning them as needed to IT.”

The Q-Layer purchase and its ability to do automated deployment and management, she said, helps Sun respond to what the other major vendors have been doing.

Darin Stahl, lead analyst at London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group, said vendors will continue to link internal virtualized infrastructure with external cloud computing, mostly because internal virtualization is much further along and can easily have the cloud name attached to it.

The cloud plays from VMware Inc., Microsoft Corp., HP Inc. and IBM Corp., he added, are all about seizing the high ground of federating internal and external cloud management.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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