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HP overhauls Network Node Manager

Upgrades network management software long thought the cornerstone of software portfolio.
By Denise Dubie , Network World , 10/22/2007
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An IT tool synonymous with network management is getting its first major overhaul in four years. More than 90% of the code in Network Node Manager i 8.0 is new and available free to customers with valid support licenses, according to HP.

The vendor this week is set to share details of NNM i 8.0, which HP officials say "reinvents and redefines network management." HP says more than 10,000 customers use NNM. IDC listed HP as the market leader, with more than 28%  share, and the vendor reported $757 million in revenue for distributed performance and availability management software.The product, said to have the largest installed base of customers worldwide, now includes features that more quickly identify the root cause of performance problems by using a combination of ongoing discovery processes, event correlation and automation capabilities, HP says.

"We certainly have thought about our installed base in the development of this product, and we focused on solving existing problems and delivering on unmet needs in this release," says Joe Fox, HP product marketing manager.

For instance, the product is able to run parallel with previous NNM deployments, which Fox says will make upgrading to NNM i 8.0 more efficient. It scales to support up to 15,000 managed devices with one install of an application server and database on a dedicated machine. (Network managers can choose to use separate servers for the application server and database software installation.) NNM i 8.0 requires no software agents be distributed to managed devices, and instead uses SNMP and Internet Control Messaging Protocol to collect data via polling. And network managers can use a Web-based AJAX thin client to log on to the product for administrative reasons.

"This is a significant upgrade that will be positively greeted by its customers, and HP is not just playing catch-up," says Will Cappelli, a research vice president at Gartner. "The NNM customer base was getting restless, and HP was on the cusp of being too late with this, letting its infrastructure management capabilities lie fallow for the sake of bigger initiatives for the past few years. But frankly, the alternatives in the market didn't look great either."

For instance, competitive pure-play network management products from Micromuse (Netcool) and Aprisma Management Technologies (Spectrum) have been absorbed by HP competitors IBM and CA, respectively. And the latter vendors, like HP, have been focused on broader IT initiatives such as application performance, IT or business service management, essentially neglecting to upgrade or communicate clearly the product road map plans for their network management tools. This has left a void in the market that traffic and flow-based vendors such as NetScout and NetQoS couldn't fill.

"If HP waited any longer to make this upgrade, it would have been taking a serious risk in IBM or CA stabilizing and getting a hold of customers that have been paying HP maintenance fees on NNM for 15 years and not seeing results," Cappelli adds. That is part of the reason the upgrade to NNM i 8.0 is free for valid support license holders, he adds, because it will not only sweeten the deal but also prevent competitors from poaching HP's customer base.

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RE: HP overhauls Network Node ManagerBy ron blanchard on October 24, 2007, 6:07 pmI hope they changed from ecs to aecs (automatic) for traps. I would like to see a clean root cause. A browser that has no false positives and very little left...

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