SHARE
Facebook X Pinterest WhatsApp

EMC Taps Into Grid for $30M

EMC is going grid. In its quest to become a more pervasive provider of information systems, EMC purchased grid software from Acxiom Corporation for $30 million as part of a technology and distribution partnership. Acxiom, of Little Rock, Ark., makes grid software that helps its customers improve the way they use computers and access information. […]

Written By
thumbnail
Clint Boulton
Clint Boulton
Jan 4, 2006
Enterprise Storage Forum content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More

EMC is going grid.

In its quest to become a more pervasive provider of information systems, EMC purchased grid software from Acxiom Corporation for $30 million as part of a technology and distribution partnership.

Acxiom, of Little Rock, Ark., makes grid software that helps its customers improve the way they use computers and access information. It provides a single location where services and data content can be manipulated, stored and made available to serve applications.

Grid technology, where many machines are applied to one task simultaneously, achieves faster results for enterprise computing. Research experts such as The 451 Group believe grid is a cornerstone for utility computing platforms, where customers can pay for computing power “by the drink.”

Initially, EMC and Acxiom will jointly develop and market an information grid solution to customers as a hosted offering from Acxiom.

But EMC has purchased the Acxiom grid software and eventually the companies will integrate relevant systems, software, services and data from both companies into one information storage grid product for customers.

The idea is to help customers meet their requirements for speedy information exchange, retrieval and management at a time when data is growing at staggering rates, said EMC CTO Jeff Nick. This will help EMC fortify its information lifecycle management (ILM) strategy for managing data from cradle to grave.

“For many organizations, innovation and competitive advantage are locked inside this wealth of data — from internal sources on customers and prospects, to external sources on demographics and purchasing habits, to supply chain data,” Nick said in a statement.

Nick said EMC has been evaluating grid software for a while and found Acxiom’s grid solution to be the most advanced. Other players in the grid software space include Platform Computing, DataSynapse and United Devices, among others.

Nick is well qualified to judge grid software. EMC hired Nick away from IBM, where he had worked for 24 years and earned the distinguished title of IBM Fellow.

Nick was responsible for the design and architecture of IBM’s on demand initiative and at one point also led IBM’s grid computing strategy. Along with the Globus co-founders, Nick was a co-author of the first grid computing/Web services document.

Now he helps EMC shape its ILM strategy.

Article courtesy of InternetNews.com

Recommended for you...

SAN vs HCI – Understanding the Differences
Jenna Phipps
Oct 6, 2023
How to Create a Multi-Cloud Strategy
Mary Shacklett
Sep 20, 2023
Product News: New FDP Mode Test Solution for SSDs
Chris Bernard
Jul 25, 2023
News: Rubrik to Integrate With Microsoft 365 Backup
Chris Bernard
Jul 18, 2023
Enterprise Storage Forum Logo

Enterprise Storage Forum offers practical information on data storage and protection from several different perspectives: hardware, software, on-premises services and cloud services. It also includes storage security and deep looks into various storage technologies, including object storage and modern parallel file systems. ESF is an ideal website for enterprise storage admins, CTOs and storage architects to reference in order to stay informed about the latest products, services and trends in the storage industry.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.