Reynolds also says the acquisition is the latest sign that standalone portal vendors are becoming a thing of the past. Plumtree Software Inc. is one of the last survivors of a once-promising sector, and even it now offers content, collaboration, and identity-management servers. Its top standalone competitor, Epicentric Inc., was bought late last year by content-management vendor Vignette Corp. Portal tools are increasingly becoming the domain of enterprise application vendors, which is precisely why Open Text made the move to buy Corechange, says Bill Forquer, senior VP of business development.
Lots of companies still haven't made final decisions on portal deployments, Forquer adds, and the reluctance to form multiple vendor relationships has them seeking out suppliers that can provide end-to-end collaborative tools. That makes it less than a surprise that Open Text has no plans to blend its LiveLink collaboration software with Corechange's Coreport product. The companies already had a partnership that resulted in some integration between the products, but Forquer says Open Text is committed to being portal agnostic, meaning it plans to continue supporting portal tools from the likes of IBM, SAP, and Sun Microsystems.
The deal, which doesn't require regulatory approval, was closed Tuesday.
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