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Virtually Speaking

Dan Kusnetzky, Paula Rooney and Ken Hess

Will VMware dilute its core asset?

By | January 13, 2010, 8:26am PST

VMware is expanding its product lineup to ensure that its portfolio matches that of virtualization rivals Microsoft, Red Hat and Citrix — and cloud providers. But is it a wise move?

Its purchase of the Zimbra e-mail and collaboration service from Yahoo shows the company’s willingness to enter the applications space, just as its acquisiton of Springsource last year demonstrated its willingness to enter the middleware market.

Does VMware really want to become a full cloud services provider.  or is the company, led by a former Microsoft exec, trying to fill in product holes to address potential customer objections to its virtualization platform? Maybe a little bit of both?

Time will tell. The Zimbra deal was not a huge investment and Zimbra is one of VMware’s hottest appliance sales. What will be interesting to see is whether or not the company expands into other application areas — such as CRM, and content management. SugarCRM and Alfresco are considered hot buyup targets for 2010 — but they won’t be cheap. A buy of either one of these companies would indicate the seriousness of VMware’s application goals.

All four virtualization vendors have identified comprehensive cloud computing strategies. Microsoft and Red Hat offer operating systems, virtualization platforms, enterprise applications and middleware. Of the four, Microsoft has the most comprehensive lineup.

Red Hat has Linux, the JBoss middleware stack and directory server but lacks the app stack that Microsoft has, including the messaging and collaboration code. To date, Red Hat has partnered closely with IBM/Lotus to deliver that functionality to its customers — and it will be interesting to see if that arrangement will be updated at LotusSphere next week. (Zimbra Collaboration Suite is also listed as a Red Hat partner in its application catalog, at least for now).

Citrix manages the core Xen virtualization platform and some of the same infrastucture ingredients of other virtualization vendors but its close partnership with Microsoft — with interoperability guaranteed — fills in whatever product gaps occur.

Is VMware also trying to change its image as a proprietary software company into an open source company?

If so, it’s not working that well. VMware has released some of its tools and View code under the GPL, and SpringSource is a big win, but the company has released none of its crown jewels to the community. And some claim the recently acquired Zimbra code and Collaboration Suite is not open source — at least  under its current licensing structure.

VMware is still the leader in virtualization, has a respectable role in the open source middleware market and has now dipped its toes into the apps space.

But overall, VMware lacks many of the ingredients of its rivals.

Surely, having an an email and collaboration service addresses one of those gaps and can only help VMware sell vSphere as a solid public and private cloud platform.

But VMware must articulate to customers and the industry at large the nature of its long term aspirations. As Dan K points out in his blog, VMware may be trying to take on Amazon or Microsoft-Red Hat? Or hedging its bets on both fronts?

The core strength of VMware has been its focus on solving the complexities of server and desktop virtualization.  By moving into the middleware and application space — whether open source or not — the company risks diluting its focus, the perception of the company’s mission and thus the value of the company itself.

It’s a risk for any company that gets into the M&A game, but not one VMware should view lightly.  The operating system market is not dead just yet.

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Topics

Paula Rooney is a Boston-based writer who has followed the tech industry for almost two decades.

Disclosure

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney owns no stock in the companies that she covers. She holds a 401K that is managed by JPMorgan.

Biography

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney has covered the technology industry for more than 15 years, starting with semiconductor design and mini-computer systems at EDN News and later focused on PC software companies including Microsoft, Lotus, Oracle, Red Hat, Novell and other open source and commercial software companies for CRN and PCWeek. She received a silver award from the American Society of Business Publication Editors in 2005 for her profile on Linus Torvalds and edited and co-authored "Partnering With Microsoft," a book about Microsoft's channel published by CMP Publishing in 2004. Rooney graduated from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1997. In her off time, she enjoys scuba diving, sailing, sun worshipping, running and reading. She resides on the shores of Scituate, Massachusetts.

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RE: Will VMware dilute its core asset?
amigosito 13th Jan 2010
There's only one headline I want to see next year:

"VMware Buys Ubuntu"
0 Votes
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VMware is the defacto standard 'now'...
linux_kernel 13th Jan 2010
Will VMware be replaced in the future, most likely
by some new technology until then it is the best.
0 Votes
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They should forget those other markets.
peter_erskine@... 13th Jan 2010
Whatever VMWare does, they need to do it /well/. Their core product is good, and the reason is that they are NOT a general software house. They have specialist, skilled programmers who understand one set of issues and have been allowed to solve those problems. So if they go into other areas, it must only be by genuine expansion and mustn't be at the expense of existing work.
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RE: Will VMware dilute its core asset?
amigosito 13th Jan 2010
There's only one headline I want to see next year:

"VMware Buys Ubuntu"

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