Skip Links

Zend Raises $20 Million

The PHP company plans to expand professional services, web application framework development, and the European sales force.

By Don Marti, LinuxWorld.com
August 27, 2006 06:19 PM ET
  • Print

PHP development and support company Zend Technologies Inc. announced today that it has raised $20 million in series D venture capital funding. Andi Gutmans, Zend's chief technology officer and a co-founder of the company, said in an interview Friday that top priorities for the new investment are Eclipse integration, the Zend Framework for web applications, and the company's services organization and European sales force.

Greylock Partners, a new Zend investor, led the funding round, and current investors Azure Capital Partners, Index Ventures, Intel Capital, Platinum Venture Capital, SAP Ventures and Walden Israel Venture Capital are also participating, the company announced.

Gutmans said Zend is planning to continue expanding its services organization, with an emphasis on high-level architecture and training. And the company plans to expand its sales force, especially in Europe, he added.

A growing services organization is needed as PHP grows from mainly powering public-facing web sites to use in more business applications, said Mark de Visser, Zend's chief marketing officer. "The big banks are all deploying the same type of technology," he said. The Zend web site lists German financial customers Onvista, wallstreet:online, Deutsche Bank, and Dresdner Bank.

The widely-used PHP language is a contender in a feature race with hot newcomer Ruby and the newly resurgent Java. The Asynchronous JavaScript And XML (AJAX) programming style, in which JavaScript code on a web page connects back to the server to change the content of a web page without reloading the whole page, is a key area. Ruby's Ruby on Rails framework and Google's Google Web Toolkit for Java already offer built-in AJAX for applications that use those languages on the server side.

Version 6 of PHP will offer improved XML support and improve the process of developing AJAX applications, Gutmans said. "We're most likely going to be integrating Dojo," he said. Dojo is a JavaScript toolkit to simplify the often time-consuming process of writing cross-browser JavaScript, needed for AJAX applications.

Zend is working with IBM on PHP support for Eclipse, Gutmans said. Zend's Eclipse-based Zend Studio offers integrated development environment features, as well as increasing amounts of HTML design functionality, he said. "We're working toward a visually toolable environment so people can drag and drop components, write their business logic, and not have to worry too much about AJAX. They will still ultimately need to know a bit of JavaScript," he said.

"We are looking to staff up the Zend Framework team," Gutmans said. Zend Framework, still in development, is a web development which Gutmans characterizes as "not another Struts" but a simple web development framework containing "80 to 90 percent of what people need." (Apache Struts is a web development framework for Java.) Zend Framework is currently available as a preview release under the open-source BSD license.

 

  • Print
What is Tech Briefcase?
TechBriefcase is a new, free service where IT Professionals can Search, Store and Share IT white papers and content like this. Learn more
Bookmark content
Speed up your research efforts with content across the web.
Search and Store
Find the white papers you need. Create folders for any topic.
View Anywhere
Open your briefcase on your iPhone, tablet or desktop. Share with colleagues.
Don't have an account yet?

Videos

rssRss Feed