Private Clouds a 'Big Priority' for Dell
30 August 2016 - 9:03AM
Dow Jones News
By Rachael King
LAS VEGAS -- Dell Inc. hopes its pending $60 billion acquisition
of EMC Corp. will make the combined company a favored supplier in
the rapidly growing market for cloud computing, where companies tap
software programs via the internet.
Dell Chief Executive Michael Dell appeared Monday at the annual
conference of EMC's VMware unit, underscoring the deal's importance
for Dell's future. He is betting that companies will use Dell's
equipment to build "private clouds," where their employees access
software programs through the internet. "A big priority for us is
making private clouds easy," Mr. Dell told the VMworld conference
Monday.
The strategy faces challenges, because prices for computing
hardware are tumbling, and many potential customers are turning to
outside providers such as Amazon.com Inc.'s Web Services unit or
Google Inc., which mostly sources its own data center
equipment.
Cloud computing is changing the economics for technology
suppliers, said David Vellante, chief analyst at research firm
Wikibon. Prices have been declining for a decade. "Now it's
accelerating and everybody is scrambling," he said.
Dell is expected to complete its acquisition of EMC in coming
weeks, after it wins regulatory approval from China. The combined
company will be the leading vendor by revenue in the world-wide $29
billion market supplying hardware to cloud-computing providers. In
2015, Dell and EMC combined garnered 18.2% of the highly fragmented
market, according to market watcher International Data Corp. That
market is characterized by low-margin hardware.
Beyond hardware, the combined company will need to knit together
a diverse group of software offerings from Dell and EMC units
including VMware, Pivotal and Virtustream. Pivotal offers services
to help software developers create cloud applications; its
customers include Ford Motor Co. and General Electric Co. With
Virtustream, Dell will get services that help run traditional
corporate software programs from vendors such as SAP SE on newer
cloud infrastructures.
VMware's software allows a single computer to run multiple
operating systems simultaneously. It is used by 99% of the Fortune
500, offering Dell additional inroads into the data centers run by
large customers.
VMware also unveiled new software and services that make it
easier for customers to run, manage and secure their applications
across different clouds. The company also extended a partnership
with IBM, through which more than 500 customers, including Marriott
International Inc., use VMware software and services to manage
their operations in IBM's cloud.
Such cross-vendor collaborations have proved difficult because
of the diversity of technologies, said Wikibon's Mr. Vellante.
Amazon Web Services offers a contained, integrated experience that
works for software developers without needing to patch technologies
together.
Write to Rachael King at rachael.king@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 29, 2016 18:48 ET (22:48 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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