Dell acquires infrastructure automation firm Gale Technologies![]() November 16, 2012 - 19:49 AMT PanARMENIAN.Net - Dell is making a deeper investment in providing converged infrastructures to automate data center operations with the acquisition of Gale Technologies. As part of the purchase, Dell plans to create a separate business group focused on enterprise systems and solutions. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, TechCrunch reports. Gale Technologies is a privately held company that provides infrastructure automation software. The company automates and orchestrates a company’s compute, storage and networking resources. The news follows Cisco’s announcement yesterday about its plans to acquire Cloupia, also an infrastructure automation software provider. Both Cisco and Dell are in the server business, which has increasingly become commoditized. Converged infrastructures give the server makers the capability to offer all-in-one solutions that integrate compute, storage and networking. Though expensive, these big box systems have become a way for customers to consolidate their data centers, which have become expensive to maintain, compared to using a service such as Amazon Web Services. Gale is one of Cisco’s strategic partners, and it also works with other Dell competitors such as EMC. Dell will use the acquisition to create a new division that focuses on selling converged infrastructure technologies. The “Enterprise Systems & Solutions” group will offer services and solutions as part of what it offers. The hardware players in the market are competing intensively to provide these converged solutions. Dell has expressed its intentions to build data centers for companies. This fits with the overall plan to manage IT operations with its own hardware and associated consulting services, TechCrunch says. Partner news It’s not the first time Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer has been interested in the New York-based hipster blogging service. The number of new smartphones delivered with Android jumped to 162.1 million in the first three months in 2013. “We believe Samsung generates more revenue and profit from the Android platform than Google does,” Neil Mawston said. The service now also makes it easier for users to add new contacts sent to them by friends, and has support for Simplified Chinese. Partner news |