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Novell has acquired SiteScape, a provider of collaboration
solutions and the founder of the ICEcore open source collaboration
project. The merger between the two companies will create
interoperable, open source and open standards-based workspaces to help
with team productivity. Financial terms of the deal were not released
but SiteScape would become a fully owned subsidiary of Novell and all
the employees will fold into Novell's ranks. Also, the SiteScape brand
will no longer exist as part of the acquisition.
The deal to acquire SiteScape came about 18 months ago when the two
companies entered into an OEM partnership in order to release Novell
Teaming + Conferencing, a workspace and real-time conferencing solution
that is centered on the ICEcore open source technology.
"The next logical step was to bring the two companies together to take
advantage of the synergies," said Gregory Webb, collaboration product
marketing manager with Novell.
The acquisition would also see Novell completely owning SiteScape's product road map, development plans and their engineers.
He added that it was essential for Novell to add open source team
collaboration technology to their line card because of the company's
focus and interest in open source standards and openness in terms of
interoperability.
"One of the things customers were telling us over and over was no one works in a wholly homogenous environment," said Webb.
Novell Teaming + Conferencing runs on both Linux and Windows and works
with Lotus Notes and Microsoft Exchange, in addition to GroupWise.
These team workspaces, accessible securely by team members both inside
and outside the company, incorporate multiple integrated collaboration
tools, including blogs, wikis, instant message, chat, voice over IP and
Web conferencing.
By acquiring SiteScape, Webb added that Novell strengthens its
commitment to the technology, gains the flexibility to create the
solutions customers and partners need and increases its capacity to
deliver more interoperability around open collaboration.
What SiteScape brings to Novell is 10 years of leadership in the
collaboration space. What Novell brings to SiteScape is better market
penetration because the company only had a small direct sales force and
its channel presence was limited.
"They had little penetration in the market, which frustrated
SiteScape," noted Webb. "What Novell brings to the acquisition is an
extensive worldwide partner ecosystem that can [reach] that market
better because we have a much larger channel base as well as a very
large customer base that SiteScape partners can begin to sell into."
Even though the SiteScape name would be discontinued, Webb said that
Novell would still provide support for existing SiteScape customers for
the company's products like Forum ST and Zon over the next several
years until they transition over to Novell technology.
Mark Levitt, program vice-president for collaborative computing and the
enterprise workplace with IDC Corp., said combined Novell-SiteScape
offerings represent the next major step forward for business
collaboration.
"Enterprise and SMB customers are looking for solutions that combine
real-time messaging, conferencing and IP voice calling along with
online workspaces, social networking, blogs, and wikis to improve team
and enterprise productivity and innovation," he added.
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