Dell puts recent acquisitions to work
Dell will implement new technologies gathered from recent acquisitions into PowerEdge servers and management appliances
Dell is implementing networking, storage, software, and hardware technologies it has gained from recent acquisitions in products that can help it move beyond servers to deliver more end-to-end solutions.
In the last year, Dell has bought nine companies, and at the Dell World trade show in Austin, Texas, it laid out how virtualization, cloud, storage, and networking technologies from those acquisitions are being built into pre-configured integrated systems and upcoming PowerEdge servers.
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Some key acquisitions over the past year include virtualized storage vendor Compellent, networking firm Force10 Networks, security firm SecureWorks, and cloud firm Boomi. Dell is incorporating technologies from RNA Networks, which was acquired in June, in the upcoming PowerEdge servers, and also wants to bring technologies from Compellent and Force10 into its management appliances for small and medium-sized businesses.
Dell will release next year the new PowerEdge 12G line of servers, which has been redesigned to include new technologies to run databases, analytics, and virtualized applications faster, said Brian Payne, executive director of server product marketing at Dell.
Included for the first time in 12G will be technology from RNA Networks, a memory virtualization company. Payne could not provide further details about what the technology is or how it would implemented, but said that it is one of many improvements intended to speed up servers.
At a rack level, the PowerEdge 12 servers could have 1,024 processor cores, more than 40TB of DRAM and more than 40TB of flash, which will coalesce to help cache and execute applications faster, CEO Michael Dell said during the keynote. The servers will include storage technology called Tier Zero in which flash storage will be closer to the processor, which could help execute database queries up to 60 times faster than current servers, Dell said.
The company also wants to bring technology from Compellent and Force 10 to small and medium-sized businesses, said Tony Parkinson, vice president of consumer, small, and medium business enterprise solutions at Dell. Management of data and devices is getting more complex with the proliferation of devices such as smartphones and tablets, and the new technologies could help SMBs.
"I would argue it's relatively easier for a large enterprise because they've got the IT resources," Parkinson said. "Our medium customers and small customers are coming to us and saying, 'Help! Can you help automate this stuff,'" Parkinson said
SMBs could tackle many of those issues through Kace, which is a line of management appliances that track hardware configurations and changes and software compliance. Dell acquired Kace early last year, and while the hardware may be generic, software like Compellent's deduplication technologies and Force10's FTOS operating system could bring the appliances to life, Parkinson said. But the technologies need to be simplified so SMBs understand how they can help.
"If we can make that as seamless as possible, then I think we can really differentiate ourselves from the rest," Parkinson said.









