HP Snaps Up 3PAR For $2 Billion 68
adeelarshad82 writes "The bidding war between HP and Dell has reached a swift and dramatic conclusion. One could even say HP sniped the auction at the last minute — to the tune of $2 billion for the acquisition of data storage provider 3PAR. HP's not-so-subtle efforts to pull the company away from a preliminary merger agreement with Dell — a $1.15-billion arrangement announced August 16 — took three successive bids to reach an ultimate conclusion. The final acquisition cost of $2 billion, confirmed by 3PAR late Friday, represents a price of $30 per share of 3PAR stock. That's triple the closing price of the company's stock before Dell's initial offer was made public, and more than double after."
First post (Score:2, Funny)
OM NOM NOM NOM ACQUISITIONS
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So I guess it averages out to $666,666,666.67 per PAR?
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$666,666,666.67 for a PAR? How much would I get for a 20 over par?
$666,666,686.67, obviously...
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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For the most part, on the vendor side it currently makes a fair amount of sense. A lot of money is being currently dropped on the 'cloud' buzzword by the market. Now, the wisdom of the market to be crazy over cloud, that's another story.... I do think HP is awfully optimistic by dropping $2 billion on 3par, hoping to recoup the losses before the market wakes up from the 'cloud' dream.
You are right that if they want all the video-on-demand, full quality home movie storing, and similar behavior that is re
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You just explained why the web would fail, btw. How could you build an ecommerce web site when you're depending on someone else to provide the bandwidth?
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Last I heard, they used peering to reduce their bandwidth costs for Youtube to near-zero [slashdot.org].
Google Docs is an "in the cloud" app and doesn't require any excessive amount of bandwidth. Neither will most other apps; they're just web pages to the user, and mostly text at that. Salesforce.com, one of the bigger cloud apps,
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What the summary doesn't say: (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:What the summary doesn't say: (Score:5, Informative)
The fault lies with the Slashdot submitter, who submitted a bad summary to a 2-day-old article, and with Soulskill who accepted the misleading submission, and with you, Lucas123, for not understanding either TFA or the GP's point that TFA was correct.
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Why? (Score:2)
Does HP really know what it's doing?
They paid too much and were in a gambler's frame of mind.
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They've already raised the stakes (twice now). Of course, Dell only has to match their offer to "win". It's like a restricted free agent in football. Dell's initial offer included a buyout (I saw 70+ million somewhere) as well as a right to match any other offer.
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They paid too much and were in a gambler's frame of mind.
Gambling addict's frame of mind. This kind of bidding war is really not the way to win at gambling.
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But what is so great about 3Par? 3Par is making SANs, which is a growing, hot market, yes, but there are tons of small competitors in the space that have similar or better technology (as far
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So obviously it isn't about the money, it's about the technology
Sometimes mergers happen to eliminate the competition. If you axe a $200M competitor, you can probably increase your revenues more than $200M because less competition means higher prices for everyone... Sure they're not going to ten-tuple, but its not going to take $2B/$200M = 10 years to pay for itself. Maybe, like 5 to 7 years?
Also, sometimes a merger means patents etc that a cheapy competitor couldn't afford to enforce, can now be cashed in.
Re:Why? (Score:5, Informative)
Also, I'm sure you realize this, but it's important to distinguish between revenue and profit. Yes $2B/$200M = 10 years, but they are also spending around $201M every year, so in the end, unless they improve the efficiency of the company, they will have made negative $10M at the end of 10 years. Not a good return on investment.
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3Par has technology and patents on "light provisioning" systems, that enables disk space to be allocated only when applications need capacity, greatly reducing IT management costs. Think of it as storage on a just-enough and just-in-time basis.
But basically it's because ex-CEO Hurd killed HP's R&D budget. With no R&D, HP is attempting to buy its way into the next big thing.
Hurd deserved to go. Killing off R&D to the point where you have to spend billions buying your way back into the game smacks
More details needed.. (Score:2)
The article suggests that they patented over-committed storage. I don't see how that is unique or different. NetApp does this out of the box, you can make linux do this if you know what you are doing, VMWare, qemu, basically every virtualization solution enables over-commited storage, and many use data dedupe to automatically reclaim storage when images happen to converge.
I presume there has to be more to it than that, unless they think 3par did it before linux, solaris, and ontap did it, which I doubt...
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3PAR makes the best SAN I've ever touched. I use SANs from EMC, HP, IBM and NetApp; 3PAR wins hands down. Only feature I miss is NAS functionality like NetApp.
I think this was a wise move by HP, as long as they are able to keep key personnel in R&D and not fuck things up.
HP: Please bury EVA.
IBM or not... (Score:1, Interesting)
IBM's storage is rebrand happy.
If it begins with DS, it's really just Engenio.
If it begins with N, it's really just NetApp.
If it begins with DCS, it's really DataDirect.
If it is XIV, it's really and truly IBM.
So chances are your SAN experience is just some other not-quite-so-big name in the market with IBM's logo slapped on and either some horrible Director integration attempt or the vendor's tools with IBM's logo on em.
IBM does do their own servers pretty much across the board, but they haven't exactly bee
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Yes, I was mainly thinking about the Engenio rebrands, should have clarified that. DS4300/DS4700/DS4800. As you said N is just NetApp.
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...keep key personnel in R&D and not fuck things up.
Not possible. My dealings with HP "Enterprise Sales and Service" will make any grown adult seek therapy. The damage done over the past decade to this company will take twice as long to correct. 3PAR as part of HP will be a sad day for the storage industry as innovation gets dispersed by blatant corporatacracy. 3PAR storage in the future will look like EVA in the present in a very short while.
Note to 3PAR: the wedding is about more than the cost of the ceremony.
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I'd be interested in knowing who you think has better technology. 3PAR and Compellent are very close, technologically and I've not seen anyone else who has anything of the sort those two do.
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It's certainly far better than anything else we'd looked at (EMC somethings & HP EVAs at the time). For me, 3PAR had the edge over Compellent, purely based on an ease of use and attitude of their sales/tech guys (they were very down to earth and honest about their produce. They claim this is their culture as they were founded by ex-Sun engineers).
3PAR and Compellent both do thin provisioning (give your servers 100Gb space even though you only have 50G real - add more disks as needed rather than repartit
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Making the Deal (Score:2)
Companies that do mergers are only able to make the aquistion work out about half the time, so it is rarely a good investment. If it is not good for the company then why does it happen?
Management often gives themselves bonus paychecks and golden chutes abound. I worked for Anthem (health insurance) when the CEO bought someone (forgot who) and he gave himself a $40 million bonus for completing the transaction. It will be the shareholders that get left holding the bag.
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Where else is that money going to go that would provide and equivalent improvement to revenue, earnings and share price (how XEOs get bonused)? With Treasury yeilds falling like a brick, and the currency and equity markets in turmoil, acquisitions are a no-brainer for boosting share-prices. Add in the facts that you get to keep a competitor from piking up a key element to thei
Another News Item From Last Week (Score:1, Insightful)
Slashdot. is now Slashdot: News For Nerds Or Stuff You Can Read From CNN.
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
Bye.
Re:Another News Item From Last Week (Score:4, Insightful)
Slashdot. is now Slashdot: News For Nerds Or Stuff You Can Read From CNN.
No problem. All newspapers repost the same news from Reuters, AP and EFE at about the same time, and many users complain when the one they subscribe to "leaves them in the dark" on grounds of bothersome redundancy for any news, and might leave to a more "all-encompassing," redundant-ish source. Slashdot is doing us a services, since we don't all read your same other sites and few IT admins ever block slashdot.
Wasn't slashdot a site meant to TALK about techish news with tech people? Our tech subscriber base is broader and better informed than you'll find on random non-specialized sites. We can post hacks, opinion on the recent wikileak and pr0n related stuff freely here; because it would otherwise leave broadcast a trail through your Facebook account on CNN. Hey, you just posted Anonymously! try THAT on CNN and any chan-free board these days! :)
HP : Offshore, now coming to 3PAR (Score:2)
Expect anything that is run in the US or the First World to be offshored. Until HP goes back to the old "HP Way", of course.
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Expect anything that is run in the US or the First World to be offshored. Until HP goes back to the old "HP Way", of course.
They spun the "old HP" into Agilent in an IPO like 11 years ago. It's not coming back.
As opposed to if Dell bought them? I'm thinking it doesn't matter which one purchases it, everyone may as well pack their desks.
Could it be true that regardless of which company bought 3PAR, the same folks in India would get all the jobs?
Check the bid history (Score:5, Funny)
One could even say HP sniped the auction at the last minute
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eBay 101 (Score:5, Funny)
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I'm really surprised that ebay hasn't come up with any kind of similar system. An option that could be chosen by the person auctioning the item where any