Tag Archive for Amazon

VMWare Crossing the Streams

The Ghostbusters warned us. Egon Spengler (Harold Ramis) warned us not to cross the streams. You should not cross the streams because as Raymond Stantz (Dan Aykroyd) explained it would cause total protonic reversal. Despite the warning, VMware is crossing the streams.VMWare Crossing the Streams

Rumors have it that Dell/EMC/VMware and Microsoft (MSFT) are crossing their streams with a VMware Cloud NSX on Microsoft Azure partnership could be coming soon.

VMware NSXVMware’s (VMW) multi-cloud approach combines the core VMware technology stack with services delivered through partnerships with other service providers including Amazon (AMZN) Amazon Web Services (AWS) Google Cloud and IBM Cloud. As well as an emerging development environment centered on the open source Kubernetes container orchestrator. Chennele2e hypothesizes,

The two companies are jointly developing software that will let their customers more easily run computing jobs, which rely on VMware software, inside Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing service … could be announced … in the coming weeks … move computing chores from their own private data centers, where VMware’s software is a critical ingredient, to Microsoft’s “public” cloud service.

In the past, VMware CEO Pat Gelsinger described a range of cross-platform work — including:

  • Azure: NSX and VDI with more VMware management products for Azure are on the way.
  • Google Cloud Platform: VMware has partnered with Google and Kubernetes. Also, Android- and  Chromebook-related offerings.

As the slide below shows, the deal with Microsoft links VMware to most of the enterprise VM’s in the cloud. What impact will the VMware-Microsoft deal impact the VMware-AWS relationship? Will AWS continue to enjoy “most favored nation” status in VMware’s public cloud partner ecosystem?

The number of virtual machines in the cloud - Enterprise based on Right Scale estimates

The Redmond Channel Partner points out that former VMware executive Ray Blanchard, who was in charge of the VMware partnership with AWS joined Microsoft a year ago.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Please Take Lotus Notes

Please Take Lotus NotesIn a move to free up some cash and make room for its $34 billion acquisition of Red Hat Inc. (RHT), IBM (IBM) is selling off its enterprise software business for $1.8 billion to HCL Technologies.

Please Take NotesHCL Technologies is global services company valued at $8 billion. India-based HCL operates out of 43 countries, serving the financial services, manufacturing, telecommunications, media, publishing, entertainment, retail, and other industries.

Lotus Notes

The sale includes most of IBM’s enterprise business, including Lotus Notes and Domino collaboration software, network management software Tivoli, and other titles. Lotus Notes was developed by Mitch Kapor in 1989 and was a pioneering enterprise software tool that swept the market with features such as email and collaboration workspaces, that we now take for granted.

Lotus 1-2-3 for DOSLotus, founded in 1982, rose to fame in 1983 with the Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet, which drove the popularity of freshly minted IBM PC. IBM took over Lotus for the then astounding sum of $3.52 billion. IBM looked to the Lotus acquisition to change its white-shirt-and-tie culture to embrace the MTV age and the new Internet.

Lotus Notes and Domino ranked among the top client-server groupware and email systems in the 1990s, competing head-on against Microsoft Exchange. While Microsoft successfully migrated Exchange to Office 365 in the cloud, Notes and Domino largely missed the cloud era.

Lotus NotesBig Blue acquired Tivoli for $743 million in 1996. It ranked among the leading IT management software providers, competing against CA Technologies, BMC, and HP in the 1990s and early 2000s. Each of those companies stumbled in recent years — opening the door for ServiceNow to disrupt major portions of the market.

The IBM world-view

The HCL deal highlights IBM’s failure to navigate the shift from client-server to SaaS. Lotus Notes stayed a client-server system and lost business to Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform.

Now that the business has been lost, IBM is moving in a different direction. Older software like Lotus Notes and Domino don’t really play a role in the new IBM world-view. One IBM solution provider told CRN,I can understand getting rid of Lotus Notes and Domino Microsoft Office 365 and Google Apps are killing the hell out of Lotus Notes.

In addition to Lotus Notes, Domino, and Tivoli, the IBM Software asset sale to HCL includes:

  • IBM Appscan, a security-focused application for identifying and managing vulnerabilities in mission-critical applications;
  • IBM BigFix endpoint management and security software;
  • IBM Unica, a cloud-based enterprise marketing automation software; and
  • IBM WebSphere Commerce, an omnichannel commerce platform for B2C and B2B organizations.

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While I am the PM on our move off of Notes to SaaS products like O365, every once in a while I find myself saying that Notes worked well. But then I remember that it is overly complex and proprietary. The client software is huge and bloated and lacks a simple client.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Barracuda Networks Has Been Bought

Barracuda Networks Has Been BoughtWhile the massive Equifax data breach is still fresh in everyone’s minds and the cybersecurity workforce is expected to be short nearly 2 million people. IT security expenditures to top $1 Trillion by 2022. Private equity giant Thoma Bravo, LLC has jumped back into the IT security market with both feet. Barracuda Networks has been bought by the private equity firm in a deal that’s valued at $1.6 billion.

BarracudaBarracuda (CUDA) sells appliance and cloud-based cybersecurity and data protection services. Clients include; Boeing, Microsoft and the U.S. Department of Defense. Barracuda says it has over 150,000 customers. Upon the close of the transaction, Barracuda will operate as a privately held company.

Barracuda Networks has been bought

Barracuda Network was founded in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 2003. From Ann Arbor, it raised at least $46 million in venture funding prior to its IPO. CUDA went public on the New York Stock Exchange in November 2013, pricing its IPO at $18. Barracuda acquired Yosemite Technologies in 2009 to expand its offerings into the storage market.

Barracuda NexGen FirewallBarracuda continued to innovate in the run-up to its acquisition. eWeek reports that in March 2017, Barracuda debuted new data backup and recovery capabilities for VMware and Microsoft virtual machines. In June 2017 Barracuda announced its new Sentinel service. The service uses artificial intelligence (AI) and container-based technologies to improve email security.

Barracuda also enhanced its network security products and services in 2017. eWeek reported in November that the company expanded the cloud capabilities for its Web Application Firewall (WAF) and NexGen Firewall products. The new capabilities include usage-based billing for the NextGen firewall running in the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud. The firewall included automated configuration capabilities for the WAF, thanks to an integration with the Puppet DevOps tool.

CEO BJ Jenkins commented on the transaction, “We will continue Barracuda’s tradition of delivering easy-to-use, full-featured solutions that can be deployed in the way that makes sense for our customers.

Thoma Bravo

Thoma Bravo is a Chicago-based private equity firm with $17 billion under management. Their appetite for IT firms is rather broad. Some of it’s most notable purchases have been:

  • Thoma Bravo is a Chicago-based private equity firmSeptember 2014 – $2.4 billion purchase of Detroit-based Compuware.
  • December 2014 – $3.6 billion acquisition of Riverbed.
  • In October 2015, they teamed up with Silver Lake to buy IT infrastructure management vendor SolarWinds for $4.5 billion.
  • April 2017 – Purchased a minority stake in the freshly re-spun McAfee.
  • June 2017 they purchased Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM), IT security management vendor Continuum.

Their portfolio has included brands such as; Bomgar, Digicert, Digital Insight, Dynatrace, Hyland Software, Imprivata, iPipeline, Nintex, PlanView, Qlik, SailPoint, and SonicWall.

Thoma Bravo has resold many of its holdings in recent years.

TechCrunch notes that private equity firms began more aggressively buying up software companies last year. The thinking seems to be they can generate reliable returns from such investments. The biggest take-private deals lately include:

  • Marketo, a marketing software maker. Went public in 2013 and was taken private again by Vista Equity Partners in 2017 for $1.79 billion in cash;
  • The sale of event-management company Cvent last year to Vista Equity Partners in a $1.65 billion deal.
  • Cybersecurity risk-monitoring platform SecurityScorecard raised $27.5 million from the VC arms of Google, Nokia, and Intel.

Other notable IT security equity funding recipients include; Attivo NetworksDarktrace, and SentinelOne.

Investopedia speculates that Thoma Bravo is paying a pretty high premium for Barracuda. CUDA now trades at 139 times earnings and 4 times sales. But under private management, its products will likely be integrated with the firm’s other software products to generate synergies.

CRN notes that being a privately owned company will give Barracuda a stronger ability to chart its own destiny. They will not have to “tap-dance to the Wall Street music,” Michael Knight, president and chief technology officer at solution provider Encore Technology Group, Greenville, S.C., said. He hopes Thoma Bravo’s infusion of capital will enable Barracuda to continue driving its public cloud business, a more solidified SD-WAN toolset, and more integrated endpoint security protection.

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I have used Barracuda products at past jobs. Including their SPAM-Email firewall appliances and their cloud-based backup up system. The pricing was adequate. Renewals were easy. The email firewalls were really robust and almost set and forget.

The few times when I needed tech support, it was available in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Barracuda, founded in Ann Arbor, was one of the early believers in the area as a high-tech hub. Barracuda has plans to spend  $2.3 million on the expansion of its operations center in the former Borders Books offices at 317 Maynard Street. The expansion will add 115 new jobs in downtown Ann Arbor over the next four years. I hope that after Barracuda Networks has been bought by Thoma Bravo, the deal does not have a “Chainsaw Al” that will kill that growth.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Follow the Open Source Money

 Matt Asay at Infoworld recently pointed out some interesting data on who really contributes to open source. Wikipedia, the most well-known open-source project, defines open-source software as software whose source code is published and made available to the public, enabling anyone to copy, modify and redistribute the source code without paying royalties or fees. Open-source code can evolve through community cooperation. These communities include individual programmers as well as large companies.

Open sourceAdobe developer Fil Maj used the GitHub REST API to pull public profile information from GitHub users. The REST API is a low-bandwidth protocol used on the internet that allows two software programs to communicate with each other. Using the API, Mr. Maj collected the company field from all 2,060,011 GitHub user profiles who were active in 2017 (“active” meaning ten or more commits to public projects). Using that data, Mr. Maj was able to pull the total number of corporate contributors to GitHub, with results that might surprise you.

Here are the ranking of GitHub contributors, with their total number of employees actively contributing to open source projects on GitHub:

RankCompanyEmployees Contributing
1Microsoft4,550
2Google2,267
3Red Hat2,027
4IBM1,813
5Intel1,314
6Amazon.com881
7SAP747
8ThoughtWorks739
9Alibaba694
10GitHub676
11Facebook619
12Tencent605
13Pivotal591
14EPAM Systems585
15Baidu584
16Mozilla469
17Oracle455
18Unity Technologies414
19Uber388
20Yandex351
21Shopify345
22LinkedIn343
23Suse325
24ESRI324
25Apple292
26Salesforce.com291
27VMware271
28Adobe Systems270
29Andela259
30Cisco Systems233

The author points out, this is not a perfect measure, but it is a much richer, more accurate data set for figuring out total contributors for any company. Even with that caveat in mind, we end up with many more corporate open source contributors than previous data suggested.

Microsoft’s contributions to open source

Microsoft's contributions to open sourceThe new data shows Microsoft (MSFT) is the number 1 open source contributor. Redmond has twice the number of contributors compared to its next nearest competitor. Remember Steve Ballmer‘s developers! developers! developers! meltdown?  For those of us that were around when Mr. Ballmer, the Microsoft CEO called open source as a “cancer” and “anti-American,” this is a remarkable change of heart for MSFT.

Red Hat

Red Hat (RHT) Mr. Maj’s data puts the open source leader among the top contributors. Red Hat has dramatically fewer engineers on its payroll than Google (GOOG) or Microsoft. As such, it’s doubly impressive that Red Hat would place so highly. Pretty much every engineer in the company works on open-source projects.

Amazon

 

Amazon logoAmazon (AMZN) Often considered an open source ne’er-do-well, Amazon comes in at No. 6 in the rankings. AMZN has nearly 900 open source contributors on staff. The article points out that Amazon has perhaps not publicly led the open source effort in the same way as Google and Microsoft have, but it remains a strong contributor to the projects that feed its developer community.

China is a net consumer of open source

Chinese companies like Baidu, Tencent, and Alibaba, which have long been perceived to be net consumers of open source, actually contribute quite a bit according to the new data.

Legacy firms

Legacy firms like Intel (INTC), Oracle (ORCL), Adobe (ADBE), and Cisco (CSCO) rank among the top 30 open source contributors reports InfoWorld.

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Color me suspicious, but have these firms really embraced open source. Have they just adapted their business model to usurp elements of open source to lay their proprietary code on top of it? This saves them the bother of writing new code and yet they can charge proprietary costs for software where they have reduced their development costs.

Tom Brady hanging high fiveAfter all, numbers don’t lie. Stats say that in 2014, half of the companies said they use open source in their product. Just one year later, the number grew to 78%. Consequently, as long as open source continues to enjoy its place in the sun, we should expect the Microsoft-open source bromance to continue.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

60 Seconds Online

60 Seconds OnlineThe global internet economy is huge, really huge, and growing. Online provider of market and consumer data, Statista says that retail e-commerce sales worldwide will top 4 Trillion dollars in 2020. Right now the worldwide internet economy takes in an incredible $3.9 million every 60 seconds.

  • Amazon (AMZN) rakes in $204,000 every minute,
  • Ebay (EBAY) rings up $160,000 in sixty seconds, and
  • Cyber-criminals steal over $1000 of other people’s cash each second.

This infographic from E-Commerce fulfillment firm RedStag Fulfillment details what happens in 60 seconds of online e-commerce.RedStag Fulfillment infographic

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.