Veritas Storage Foundation Software Inc
Agenda VERITAS Software Today IT Challenges VERITAS Storage Foundation for Windows Storage Virtualization Centralized Storage Management Increased. 세계 최대의 Storage Software Company $1.75BN Revenues 6100+ Employees 40 Countries 55% Five Year CAGR Fortune 500의 99%가 Veritas Software 사용.
Number of employees 7000 Website Veritas Technologies LLC is an American international that was founded in 1983 as Tolerant Systems, renamed Veritas Software Corp. In 1989, merged with in 2005, and was bought out by a equity firm in 2016. Static Ip Changer Program Pro. It was headquartered in.
The company specialized in storage management software including the first commercial,,,, the personal/small office backup software and the popular enterprise,. Veritas Record Now was an early CD recording software. Jenway 6100 Spectrophotometer Manual. Veritas was previously listed under the VRTS ticker symbol, but is now a privately owned company. History Early history Tolerant Systems was founded in 1983 by Eli Alon and Dale Shipley (both from ) to build based on the idea of a building block called a 'show box'. A shoe box consisted of an processor, running a version of called TX, and on which applications ran, and an, running a real time executive (RTE), developed by Tolerant. Both processors were processors.
The system was marketed as the 'Eternity Series.' The TX software gained a level of fault-tolerance through check-pointing technology. Applications needed to be fortified with this check-pointing to allow roll-back of the application on another processor if a hardware failure occurred.
Tolerant also developed a forerunner of today's systems by incorporating a and multiple copies (which they called 'N-plexing') the disk drive content. Dale Shipley formed Tolerant Software in January 1988.
Tolerant Software produced a journaling file system and a virtual disk management system for the AT&T UNIX platform, which was built by a new team led by John Carmichael. In 1989, Mark Leslie joined the company as CEO and renamed the company Veritas in honor of Harvard, his alma mater The firm started out with a relationship with AT&T to provide the file ( Veritas File Manager - VxFS) and disk management (Veritas Volume Manager - VxVM) software for its operating system, and to jointly market and support the products to the system OEMS (Sun, HP, etc.). The OEM model provided royalties to Veritas when the OEM shipped its products to end users. On December 9, 1993 the company had its (IPO), selling 16 million shares to the public, and valuing the company at $64 million. Growth and Acquisitions At the end of 1996 Veritas had revenues of $36 million.
• Tidalwave Technologies Acquisition: In 1995 the company acquired Tidalwave Technologies, a small San Francisco based company for $4.2 million in stock. Tidalwave specialized in cross-platform High Availability (HA) Software and thus entered the HA business. • OpenVision Acquisition: In 1997 the company acquired OpenVision Technologies, another public company of the same size, and thus entered the backup business. Although the company only retained $20 million of OpenVision's 1996 base, it completed the 1997 year at $120 million. • Seagate NSMG Acquisition: The company achieved $200 million in 1998, and in 1999 acquired the backup business from Seagate Software, which was also approximately $200 million in 1998. In 1999 the combined company achieved revenues of $700 million, and became the undisputed leader in the Storage Management Software industry. In 2000 the company achieved revenues of $1.2 billion, was added to the S&P 500, became a Fortune 1000 company, and became the tenth largest software company in the world by revenues, and third largest by market capitalization.