HP Opts For Opsware

HP to integrate Opsware's data-center automation software into its Utility Data Center product.

Paul Travis, Managing Editor, InformationWeek.com

March 4, 2003

1 Min Read

Hewlett-Packard is adding automation software from Opsware Inc. to its Utility Data Center product, which is used to manage data-center resources. The two vendors unveiled a deal Monday under which HP also will resell Opsware to its enterprise customers.

HP's UDC is used to "virtualize" computing resources such as servers, storage, networking, operating systems, and applications, and treat them as a single pool of resources that can be allocated to jobs as needed. Opsware is used to automate software provisioning, application deployment, and patching. HP says the combination of UDC and Opsware can cut deployment times by 80% and produce substantial savings in annual operational costs.

Opsware was founded as Loudcloud, which offered hosting services, by Marc Andreessen of Netscape fame. The company developed data-center automation software to help set up and configure servers in its hosting centers. It later sold the hosting business and transformed itself into Opsware to focus on automating the provisioning and management of data-center servers.

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About the Author(s)

Paul Travis

Managing Editor, InformationWeek.com

Paul Travis is Managing Editor of InformationWeek.com. Paul got his start as a newspaper reporter, putting black smudges on dead trees in the 1970s. Eventually he moved into the digital world, covering the telecommunications industry in the 1980s (when Ma Bell was broken up) and moving to writing and editing stories about computers and information technology in the 1990s (when he became a "content creator"). He was a news editor for InformationWeek magazine for more than a decade, and he also served as executive editor for Tele.Com, and editor of Byte and Switch, a storage-focused website. Once he realized this Internet thingy might catch on, he moved to the InformationWeek website, where he oversees a team of reporters that cover breaking technology news throughout the day.

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