ie8 fix

Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

CA builds NimSoft service on Rackspace

By | November 8, 2011, 3:42am PST

Summary: Rackspace says it isn’t seeing any slowdown from enterprise customers as they migrate toward cloud computing.

CA’s IT management as a service effort is being built on Rackspace’s infrastructure.

Rackspace CEO Lanham Napier outlined the deal on the company’s third quarter earnings conference call. Under the deployment, CA will host its NimSoft IT management application on Rackspace. NimSoft is a software as a service monitoring and reporting application.

The win for Rackspace is notable given CA’s girth. CA is a $5 billion enterprise software vendor and may attract others to Rackspace’s hosting and cloud services. CA is a direct customer of Rackspace and using the hosting service in the background.

Napier said the company isn’t seeing any slowdown from enterprise customers as they migrate toward cloud computing.

In Rackspace’s third quarter, the enterprise business continued to grow at a rapid clip. Napier said:

The early adoption that we win from enterprise customers, it tends to be a mission-critical Web app that their IT department is not tailor-made to run. Inside of every enterprise CIO’s IT department today, there is a long tail of applications. The IT department itself is tailor-made to run a handful of those applications, the billing system, the ERP system, the manufacturing system, et cetera. The information and the proliferation of apps has happened further outside the IT department down that long tail in the Web app space…The enterprise growth component of it is driven by the adoption of those incremental applications.

Rackspace reported third quarter earnings of $19.98 million, or 14 cents a share, on revenue of $264.6 million, up 32.5 percent from a year ago. Rackspace’s total server count was 78,717, up from 74,028 in the second quarter. Rackspace’s earnings met expectations and the sales figure topped Wall Street estimates.

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

The discussion hasn’t started yet. Why don’t you begin it?

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix