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HP launches alliance for integrating apps, network gear

By Matt Hamblen, Computerworld
January 26, 2009 03:20 PM ET
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Hewlett-Packard's ProCurve networking division Monday announced an ambitious alliance with enterprise application vendors to optimize their software as it runs over ProCurve switches and other networking gear.

The program, called Open Network Ecosystem (ONE), relies on a new ONE Services zl Module, which is blade hardware for two HP switch families that will go on sale Feb. 1 for US$5,995, said Matthew Zenner, worldwide director of data center networking for ProCurve. The applications of the various partners are tested and certified to interoperate with the new blade module, and the module will help eliminate the need for redundant gear, thereby reducing costs, he said.

ONE will help "remove complexity with application deployment," Zenner said.

The various applications in the ONE alliance come from Microsoft Corp. for network access protection; Avaya Inc. for IP telephony and unified communications, McAfee Inc. for security, F5 Networks for load balancing, and Riverbed Technologies for WAN optimization and acceleration, Zenner said. Leaders from the various alliance partners joined HP in a webinar today on the announcement.

HP also announced new Data Center Connection Manager software for streamlining operations in data centers by offering automated provisioning of servers and network gear for both traditional and virtual environments. It will be available in the second quarter for $27,100. A new DCM Controller will sell for $31,999 although no shipping date was announced.

In addition, HP announced five new ProCurve 6600 series switches for edge of network locations outside of data centers, which could include buildings on a campus outside of a data center building. Pricing will run from $4,699 to $12,499, depending on configuration, and will ship at various times in the next several months, starting in March. HP said the 6600 series employs a reversible airflow system and the ability to turn off unused ports for better energy management.

Because the ONE alliance program is new, it's hard to estimate how much integration of applications with networking hardware HP can accomplish, said Zeus Kerravala , an analyst at Yankee Group Inc. in Boston.

"But if they pull that integration off, they are a viable competitor to Cisco," Kerravala said, referring to networking market leader Cisco Systems Inc. HP is second in sales of networking equipment to business customers. Globally, Cisco has an installed base of about 60% of all switching ports, while HP has about 10%. "No one else has come that close to Cisco in a long time," he said.

Kerravala said the ONE vision is comparable to Cisco's Integrated Services Router concept, which is designed to help IT managers provision a network with a variety of applications running on all types of networking gear. The chief difference, he said, is that Cisco has built its own application components, while HP will rely on third parties in the alliance.

"Success or failure will depend on whether HP really has the best of breed partner in every case," he said. "The ultimate measure of success is if they can take a chunk of flesh out of Cisco."

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