VMware buys B-hive Networks

By
Follow google news

VMware has announced its acquisition of B-hive networks, a privately-held application performance management software company.

VMware buys B-hive Networks
B-hive Networks, which has its headquarters in San Mateo, California and its main R&D facilities in Herzliya, Israel will now help VMware provide punters with proactive performance management and service level reporting for applications running on VMware virtual machines.

The acquisition means that B-hive's Israeli R&D will become VMware's newest development centre.

VMware's chief technology officer, Stephen Herrod, Ph.D said that because B-hive has an agentless, virtual appliance-based approach, it pips the others to the post when it comes to monitoring, as it can, "proactively manage application performance to specified levels".

He added: "These capabilities, combined with VMware's proven virtualisation platform, can allow our customers to consistently deliver on their application service level objectives."

B-hive, founded in 2005, apparently gives increased visibility into application performance in virtual environments like end-user transaction response time, virtual machine utilisation and cross-virtual machine dependencies.

Setting itself aside from OS-based performance monitoring products, B-hive purportedly measures performance across multi-tier or service-oriented architecture applications, distributed across clusters of ESX hypervisors and virtual machines.

CEO and co-founder of B-hive, Yoav Dembak, said in a press release that the company's technology was garnering importance, "as customers move from the physical to virtual."

He added: "We expect the B-hive R&D team to be an integral part of our new development centre in Israel." ยต
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
theinquirer.net (c) 2010 Incisive Media
Tags:

Most Read Articles

WA man jailed for at least five years for evil twin attack

WA man jailed for at least five years for evil twin attack

Cochlear plugs AI into its global contact centre operations

Cochlear plugs AI into its global contact centre operations

ATA asks fed gov to make triple zero "compliant" device list public

ATA asks fed gov to make triple zero "compliant" device list public

BoM's seven-year technology transformation cost $866m

BoM's seven-year technology transformation cost $866m

Log In

  |  Forgot your password?