Citrix moves into the cloud with Cloud.com purchase
- 12 July, 2011 23:02
- Comments 1
Jumping into the quickly growing market of cloud software providers, virtualization software provider Citrix has purchased open-source cloud software provider Cloud.com, the companies announced Tuesday. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
"We view this acquisition as very strategic and accelerating what we are doing in the cloud infrastructure marketplace," said Sameer Dholakia, a Citrix vice president of market development.
"We believe that [cloud computing] is a transformative trend that is fundamentally changing the way IT infrastructure is designed, built, delivered and consumed," Dholakia said. "We believe that there will be thousands of providers offering a vast array of new cloud services."
Cloud.com, formerly called VMOps, offers an open-source stack of orchestration and administrative software for running multitenant Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) cloud deployments, called CloudStack.
Citrix plans to continue to market the software for creating large-scale public cloud deployments, for internal enterprise use or as a basis of cloud computing services.
"Our focus is very much around enabling organizations to build cloud-scale architectures and infrastructure the way that the largest clouds in the world have been built," Dholakia said.
CloudStack supports not only Citrix's Xenserver hypervisor, but also the open-source KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine), Microsoft's Hyper-V and VMware's vSphere. CloudStack is also closely integrated with the OpenStack open-source cloud stack.
CloudStack will continue to be "hypervisor-neutral," and to be closely intertwined with OpenStack, said Peder Ulander, former Cloud.com chief marketing officer and now vice president of products for Citrix.
"We will maintain a focus on massive scalability," Ulander said.
Citrix plans to integrate it closely with its NetScaler Cloud gateway and NetScaler Cloud Bridge in a way that allows users of public cloud services to bridge cloud-based computations with those running on their own back-end infrastructures.
Cloud.com customers include companies such as Nokia, GoDaddy and Zynga, which offers the popular Farmville series of online games. "We are proven at scale. Some of these customers are well into thousands of servers deployed in their clouds," Ulander said.
In order to better focus on this emerging market of cloud software, Citrix has started a new business division, called the Cloud Platforms Product Group, which will be headed by Dholakia. Dholakia was the former CEO of virtualization vendor VMLogix, which Citrix acquired last year.
Joab Jackson covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Joab on Twitter at @Joab_Jackson. Joab's e-mail address is Joab_Jackson@idg.com
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email ARN
- Follow ARN on twitter
- McAfee Whitepaper: Building the Business Case for Privacy
- Smart Cloud: Move Beyond monitoring to Holistic Management of Application Performance
- Cloud and Co-Location Solutions
- New Gateway Anti-Malware Technology Sets the Bar for Web Threat Protection (Sponsored by McAfee)
- Virtualization and Consolidation Solutions
- Brocade’s Meyer appointed to OpenDaylight Project Committee
- Barracuda Networks raises free capacity of Copy.com to 15GB
- EXCLUSIVE: Cyan lays out Australian expansion plan
- EXCLUSIVE: Channel training integral to Intel smartphone/tablet growth
- In Pictures: She's gonna blow! 10 Star Trek technologies that are almost here
-
Barracuda Networks raises free capacity of Copy.com to 15GB
-
Barracuda Networks raises free capacity of Copy.com to 15GB
-
Barracuda Networks raises free capacity of Copy.com to 15GB
-
Google Play Music All Access not available in Australia
-
Barracuda Networks raises free capacity of Copy.com to 15GB




Comments
Interesting
1
Not one use of the word partner or reseller in the announcment