Contact: Brenon Daly
Just three weeks after VMware inked its company-defining acquisition of SpringSource, the virtualization kingpin is throwing the doors open on its annual VMworld conference today. (We can only hope that those attending the get-together found it smoother than those trying to access the conference through the website. For much of Monday morning, pages on the VMworld site were unavailable due to ‘temporary maintenance.’ With our tongue planted firmly in cheek, we might suggest that they need to add some additional server capacity.)
Although known primarily for its virtualization software, VMware’s purchase of SpringSource indicates that it sees much of its future growth coming from ‘cloud computing.’ To show just how serious the company is taking this, consider that VMware is spending roughly twice as much on SpringSource as it spent, collectively, in the dozen deals it had done before picking up the open source application development startup. The VMware-SpringSource transaction is also, we would argue, the most important cloud computing deal so far.
As a concept, cloud computing is a relatively new term, but one that has caught on strongly in the tech industry. Consider that a search of ‘cloud computing’ in our 451 M&A KnowledgeBase returns 36 deals already this year, up from just eight transactions in all of 2008. Before last year, there were no instances of the term in our M&A database, which has more than 20,000 technology deals going back to the beginning of 2001.
Of course, some of that can be chalked up to the fact that cloud computing is a pretty vague and sprawling term, covering everything from infrastructure management to storage to security to hosting and other areas. To help get some clarity around what can be an otherwise opaque topic, The 451 Group will be hosting its own conference on Thursday called ‘Cloud in Context.’ The half-day event in San Francisco will feature end users discussing working in the cloud, innovative startups and (for the first time ever) the release of our own estimates and projections for the cloud computing market. More details on ‘Cloud in Context’ can be found at the conference website.