Search and DocFinder
 
Search help/advanced search

 


News NetFlash: Daily News Internat'l News This Week in NW The Edge Net.Worker Features Research Buyer's Guides Reviews Technology Primers Vendor Profiles Forums Columnists Knowledgebase Help Desk Dr. Intranet Gearhead Careers Free Newsletters Subscription Center Seminars/Events Reprints/Links White Papers Partner with Us Site Map Contact Us Awards Corporate info Home









By Ann Bednarz
Network World, 04/29/02

Boingo Wireless
Egenera
ForeScout Technologies
Grand Central Communications
Intelliden
Maranti Networks
MeshNetworks
Proficient Networks
Redline Networks
Virtela Communications
How last year's picks are faring

Company name: Suggests concepts such as "energy" and "next generation."

Origin: Founded in March 2000 by Vern Brownell, former CTO of Goldman Sachs, and Ken Zolot, a former independent consultant to Goldman Sachs and an entrepreneur.

Funding: A $30 million second round closed in July 2001, bringing the total to $50 million.

Key investors: Austin Ventures, CSFB Private Equity, Goldman Sachs, Kodiak Venture Partners, Spectrum Equity Investors and YankeeTek Ventures.

CEO: Vern Brownell.

Product: BladeFrame multiprocessing blade server.

Egenera's founders are well-acquainted with the trials of managing thousands of servers. The two collaborated on a number of IT projects, and the experience fueled their drive to create a blade server capable of distributing computer processing power like a utility. Released last September, Egenera's BladeFrame server accommodates up to 24 blades, each of which has two or four Intel processors, in an enclosure containing network and external storage connections. The blades can be hot-swapped and support dynamic reprovisioning so administrators can allocate processing power to applications on the fly.

Advertisement:

The buzz around blade servers is that they are faster to deploy and easier to manage than traditional rack servers, plus they use less power and generate less heat. With those perks, it's no wonder Egenera, in Marlboro, Mass., faces competition in the blade server market from big name vendors including Compaq, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, IBM-spinout OmniCluster and newcomer RLX Technologies. But whereas most available models are edge servers for applications such as Web hosting, BladeFrame stands out with its application server approach. It supports back-end database and financial applications, and front-end applications. A limitation, at least for now, is that BladeFrame only runs Linux. But Egenera plans support for Microsoft's .Net platform late this year or early 2003.

Egenera's customers, which number in the "high teens," according to the company, include Credit Suisse First Boston and online learning infrastructure provider Blackboard. BladeFrame pricing starts at about $170,000.

Previous Company    Next company


Related links

Apply for your free subscription to Network World. Click here.

Get Copyright Clearance
Request a reprint or permission to use this article.

Send this article to a colleague

Please select a type of format for the email you want to send:
TEXT
HTML
Recipient's name:

Recipient's e-mail:
Your name:

Your e-mail:
Comments:

Feedback

Tell us your thoughts on this article or the issues raised in it. We'll cc: the author and editors on all comments.

Comments:

Name:
E-mail address:

Can we post your comments in an online forum on the topic?
Yes No

What did you think of this article?
Very useful Somewhat useful Not at all useful

Would you want to see:
More articles on this topic
Fewer articles on this topic

Thank you! When you click Submit, you'll be taken back to this article.

 

Responsible for insuring the safety of your network?

NWFusion offers two FREE security e-mail newsletters to help you keep your enterprise network secure.

Click here to sign-up.

Advertisement:


Editorial Partners program
Three free and easy ways to bring Network World's in-depth editorial content to your own Web site.
Learn more




  Copyright, 1995-2002 Network World, Inc. All rights reserved.