IBM gets Blade

Robert Clark
28 Sep 2010
00:00

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IBM has bought data center switching firm Blade for a reported $400 million, apparently in a move to bring equipment it is already using in-house.

 

IBM said it has been working with Blade since 2002, and has deployed its technology in more than half of its System x BladeCenters. 

 

Big Blue did not disclose financial details, but Barronsreported that it was paying around $400 million. Blade, founded as a unit of Nortel and spun off in 2006, raised $230 million in second-round funding last September from Juniper, NEC and others, Barrons said.

 

Analysts said the deal was probably intended to make IBM more independent of Cisco 

and was not aimed at its OEM partnership with Juniper

 

Juniper is also an investor in this deal and said in a statement that the acquisition “will enable us to collaborate more closely” with IBM.

 

Announcing the deal, IBM said Blade's “industry-tested switches and software are designed to improve systems performance for faster delivery of information, optimize virtual environments and lower energy use.

 

“With Blade, IBM can drive innovation at the systems networking level to enable clients to speed the delivery of key information from system to system – for workloads such as analytics and cloud computing – while also reducing data center costs.”

 

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MORE ARTICLES ON: Cisco,  IBM,  Juniper,  Merger and Acquisition

Source: 

telecomasia.net

Robert Clark

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