Yahoo's Zimbra Joins The Cloud Club

Yahoo's Zimbra is becoming a hosted service provider in its own right, for the first time taking its open-source, Web-based messaging and collaboration application straight to a select customer segment.

Jim Manico, OWASP Global Board Member

October 28, 2008

2 Min Read
InformationWeek logo in a gray background | InformationWeek

Yahoo's Zimbra is becoming a hosted service provider in its own right, for the first time taking its open-source, Web-based messaging and collaboration application straight to a select customer segment.Zimbra's market of choice: universities, which still have the option to host the software on their own or through third parties; the majority of the 500 educational institutions already using Zimbra's software have it on-premises, according to the company, which runs 20 million mailboxes for such schools as Stanford University, Georgia Tech, Northeastern, Texas A&M and Mississippi State. "With the new Zimbra Hosted, we have removed the challenge of managing thousands of mailboxes and encouraged schools to rebrand Zimbra as their own, creating a communications portal that connects all key audiences," said Satish Dharmaraj, Zimbra co-founder and Yahoo! vice president, in a statement.

Zimbra's software suite comprises e-mail, shared calendars, online documents authoring, instant messaging, and mobility. Reports PCWorld, Zimbra is offering a free version of its hosted offering to students and alumni (that is, with advertising), which includes the Zimbra Desktop component for working without an Internet connection, open APIs for IT system customization and integration, and disaster recovery backups. An advertising-less version costs $2 per user per year, and also includes synchronization capabilities for iPhones, 99.9 percent uptime guarantee, and phone support. For faculty, Zimbra Hosted cost $35 per year per mailbox and includes other features like synchronization with Outlook and BlackBerry devices.

Though Zimbra Hosted isn't an option for smaller businesses, that could be just around the corner. Though short on details, Zimbra marketing VP John Robb told VentureBeat that this is Zimbra's first move in the direction of hosting its own services and that the strategy was part of the bigger picture when it was acquired by Yahoo for $350 million-plus more than a year ago.

More From bMighty: Cloud Computing For Your Business

About the Author

Jim Manico

OWASP Global Board Member

Jim Manico is a Global Board Member for the OWASP foundation where he helps drive the strategic vision for the organization. OWASP's mission is to make software security visible, so that individuals and organizations worldwide can make informed decisions about true software security risks. OWASP's AppSecUSA<https://2015.appsecusa.org/c/> conferences represent the nonprofit's largest outreach efforts to advance its mission of spreading security knowledge, for more information and to register, see here<https://2015.appsecusa.org/c/?page_id=534>. Jim is also the founder of Manicode Security where he trains software developers on secure coding and security engineering. He has a 18 year history building software as a developer and architect. Jim is a frequent speaker on secure software practices and is a member of the JavaOne rockstar speaker community. He is the author of Iron-Clad Java: Building Secure Web Applications<http://www.amazon.com/Iron-Clad-Java-Building-Secure-Applications/dp/0071835881> from McGraw-Hill and founder of Brakeman Pro. Investor/Advisor for Signal Sciences.

Never Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights