Symantec to Buy Veritas 258
jortega writes "Symantec is looking into buying Veritas for $13bn." The linked article is mostly about biz stuff. Seems like a kind of strange deal to me.
My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells down by the seashore.
A done deal (Score:4, Informative)
Re:A done deal (Score:2)
This is part of John Thompson's bid to make Symantec "six by six"--that's $6B revenue (or profit? I think revenue...) by end of 2006. It's a great promise to investors, but not if it requires reckless M&A's.
When I heard about this (when I worked there), I thought, "As long as it doesn't cause 'zero by seven.'"
Re:Symantec (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is the percentage of H1Bs a key question? I don't get it. Is this just another xenophobic rant or is there a relevant point to this question?
If a company honestly does its business, thus providing valuable services to willing companies, is that not enough? Why is it important for corporations to support your fav
Re:A done deal (Score:2)
Re:A done deal (Score:2)
The Market (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The Market (Score:2)
doesn't like this much, Symantec is down 8% and Veritas is down slightly as well, and so far has failed to approach the takeover price of around $30 bucks a share. Probably due to increased competition in the secuiruty market.
Symantec doesn't have $30/share for Veritas. It's actually a stock for stock trade, with 1 share of Veritas getting 1.1242 shares of Symantec. At $25.15 for Symantec, that only makes Veritas worth $28.27/share.
Re:The Market (Score:2)
Re:The Market (Score:4, Informative)
While you may disagree with my opinion, S&P downgraded the stock, and
other analysts do not like it as well - American Technology Research analyst Donovan Gow said the market's negative reaction reflects the stock market's puzzlement over why Symantec, a leader in the rapidly growing market for security software, is buying Veritas, whose sales have been rising at a much slower clip. here [sfgate.com]
Symantec is down 25% from monday. I'm not saying I'm right, but do a google and there are several sources that agree.
What do I have enemies here or something (Score:2)
All one has to do is a simple google to see that there are several anylysts who question this move.
HERE [bloomberg.com]
Analysts downgraded both companies. Legg Mason analyst Todd Weller wrote in a note to clients that Symantecs' 20 percent sales growth rates will be dragged down by Veritas's slower sales, which are forecast to rise 10 percent. ``From a near-term perspective,
How is it strange? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How is it strange? (Score:3, Insightful)
Given my experience with Symantec's other areas that they bought their way into (firewalls, for example), I think this means it's time to stop considering Veritas...if it's an
Re:How is it strange? (Score:2, Interesting)
Backup is necessary for data integrity, and data integrity is necessary for security. Sounds pretty straightforward to me.
So, to the market (and to many outsiders) this looks like Symantec trying to buy their way into a market they have no expertise in.
Symantec's very big on acquisition; if they don't
TWO WORDS (Score:4, Insightful)
The world of Information Security has been turned on its ear in the past two years. Little - if any - corporate security measures are focused on methodology such as Threat Analysis or Risk Assessment. The brave new world is mandated compliance - with Sarbanes-Oxley taking the lead at publicly-traded corporations.
Symantec probably has their eye on the data-retention provisions of SOX and GLBA. This is their sales message - because CEO's get jail-time for SOX violations.
Re:How is it strange? (Score:2)
Powerquest was Partition Magic. Norton has had Norton Ghost for ages; it's an drive imaging and backup tool.
I guess I've always looked to Norton for their utilities sweet and AV. They only got a firewall after buying ATGaurd; it
Re:How is it strange? (Score:2)
gclef wrote: Because everything *except* the data backup are traditional "security" roles. Backup is needed, and recognized by security folks as good, but backup isn't traditionally considered a "security" product.
If you view it from more of a risk management viewpoint and call it all "business continuity", then backup fits quite well. In that case most security plays a preventative role, and backup plays a recovery role. My guess is that many of the buyers are viewing it from this viewpoint. If your pro
Symantec isn't just security (Score:2)
OMG (Score:5, Funny)
JBuilder did Symantec (Score:2)
Forward Thinking (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Forward Thinking (Score:3, Insightful)
Damn you! (Score:2)
I heard (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I heard (Score:2)
And based on one of your previous posts
it looks like you're giving all your secrets away. I will be patiently awaiting your future business savvy advice on Slashdot!
Just fabulous (Score:2)
The only thing I want to know is whether Symantec execs will remove their dicks from the asses of their employees now, and will transfer that love to Veritas employees.
Re:Just fabulous (Score:4, Funny)
1 foot in the door
1 foot out the door
1 foot in your ass
Not sure who they're using now, but employees I've kept in touch with indicate that it's gotten more efficient: they wear cleats now.
Re:Just fabulous (Score:3, Insightful)
Stop being a pedantic shithead for a minute, and consider the statistical probability of 38% of a permanent workforce suddenly becoming unproductive.
Simply, you don't know what the hell you're talking about. Yo
Office Reaction (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree...
Re:Office Reaction (Score:2)
Re:Office Reaction (Score:4, Interesting)
With the announcement of this deal, the show of hands was unanimous for 'people not returning after christmas' who work on the Veritas account.
Re:Office Reaction (Score:2)
I gave up on Norton a couple of years ago. Nearly everyone I know that still uses Norton is very unhappy with all the popups that have nothing to do with the task at hand - dealing with computer viruses and related malware.
We now have Computer Associates eTrust Antivirus on every Windoze computer at the office. It works every bit as well as Norton did at its' best and with n
Are you for real? (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you really work for CA? Is CA as aware of how people feel about them? If the answer to these questions is yes, why doesn't CA do something about it? Why must CA destroy products and anger customers?
Re:Are you for real? (Score:2)
All I can say, is as a former employee of Veritas, who literally worked in every level of support from the lowest to highest levels
In fact, I was expecting CA to purchase Veritas, o
In related news (Score:4, Informative)
Re:In related news (Score:2)
Maybe Symantec's just diversifying (Score:3, Insightful)
Jack of All Trades... (Score:4, Insightful)
Once, long ago, Peter Norton made some damn good tools for DOS. Then came their antivirus product, and it was pretty good, too.
Then came Symantec, and so far I'm not impressed with anything they've done. Have they done anything? Other than buy other companys' products and rebrand them?
All the cool stuff, like Ghost, Tools and AV, came from Norton. The Raptor/Velociraptor firewalls were purchased.
Veritas makes some good stuff. Unfortunately, I believe Symantec will fix that over time.
Mediocre seems to be their watchword.
-Charles
Re:Jack of All Trades... (Score:3, Informative)
The Norton Utilities were mighty fun during the DOS days.
Re:Jack of All Trades... (Score:2)
It doesn't do everything (not by any means). All it does is give you bit-for-bit clones and images of a complete hard drive or partition, including empty space. But it does what it does
Re:Could dd be any use? (Score:2)
will try to read 120GB before writing that to disk...
try:
to get the number of blocks the hd contains, and then
double bs and half count a few times to make the transfer more efficient (as long as it is a multiple of 512 bytes)
Re:Jack of All Trades... (Score:2)
I don't remember now - was the norton thing before or after symantec was into being an ide company competing with borland with symantec cafe?
Re:Jack of All Trades... (Score:2)
When I worked there, I lived through several M&A cycles, but sooner or later, they always look at site redundancies as a way to settle old scores, (former competitors, internal power struggles).
I'd be very nervous if I worked at any of the smaller sites, or especially HQ in MV, or for any "overlap" departments (Support, HR, etc.).
The long
Re:Jack of All Trades... (Score:2)
I paid an a$$load of cash upfront, plus yearly support contracts (I try not to remember the actual numbers *shudder*). But it's worth it when you need backups to "just work" and keep on doing so.
Re:Jack of All Trades... (Score:2)
Many other backup solutions are no longer on the market because they were acquired and snuffed by Seagate/Veritas over the years. Some of them were. . . better.
Access database for your config file? WTF?!
Probably the original design was "scalable" in intent, and looked towards SQL or Oracle, but WTF, were you going to pay for either of those just to track your backup tapes?
It's a problem that's best solved with a relational dat
Not looking to buy, they are "buying" them. (Score:2)
"Symantec Corp. and VERITAS Software Corp. today announced a definitive agreement to merge in an all-stock transaction. Based on Symantec's stock price of $27.38 at market close on December 15, 2004, the transaction is valued at approximately $13.5 billion."
one more owner for backup exec... (Score:3, Informative)
then it was purchased by acada (? - acadia)
then it was purchased by seagate
then it was purchased by veritas
and amazingly enough, backup exec has continued to get better over time.
eric
Re:one more owner for backup exec... (Score:2)
I happen to know that these poor saps spend a LOT of time re-branding that software.
They should just give up, and define BRAND as a constant in the header, so it can be a one-liner.
Re:one more owner for backup exec... (Score:2)
I mourn the loss of decent tech support, myself. Symantec has never had very good tech support. I've called Veritas about Backup Exec for Netware and they've helped me troubleshoot getting the tape drive to recognize right in Netware, rather than shunt me off to Novell. Above and beyond the call of duty. You'll be missed, Veritas.
Re:one more owner for backup exec... (Score:2)
The Windows team is more likely to be composed of the latest batch of paper MCSE's fresh out of community college. Crusty-old MSCE's ask for too much money.
nothing is what it seems or is reported to be... (Score:4, Interesting)
I would look at Symantec buying Veritas as a defensive move...EMC has moved into new markets aggressively and managing the security of all that data they already store/fetch would be logical. It would also seriously crimp a growth path that Symantec could take into the same market space from its position as a security provider.
Now, who can tell me if I should sell my VRTS?
Re:nothing is what it seems or is reported to be.. (Score:2)
Makes you wonder... (Score:3, Funny)
- Symantec Virus DevStudio 7
- Symantec Spam Server 5
- Symantec Gator
- Symantec Hard Drive Eraser 4
- Symantec Registry Hoser XP
- Symantec Network Trojan 5.5
- Symantec EZ Spyware 4
- Symantec RAID Drive Ejector 3
That would pretty much cover their business development needs for the OTHER product line that we're already aware of.
IronChefMorimoto
Unless (Score:2)
Veritas goes to Semantic and I dump Veritas with a vengance.
Ultrabac does the same stuff with a lot smaller install, and for less money.
Symantec is a pain (Score:2)
Business Objects (Score:2)
Have you actually *used* anything they have besides Crystal Reports? I'll just say there is a damn good reason they bought their competition, and it's not to "pull a Microsoft"
Backups are part of security... (Score:3, Insightful)
Not to me. If you ever get into the infosec theory stuff, you'll study the CIA acronym; the "A" in it stands for availability, and that's what backups provide.
A backup company is a smart addition to a security company.
Re:Backups are part of security... (Score:2, Insightful)
As an aside, I wonder how HP is feeling now? They dumped the filesystem (AdvFS) and clustering (TruCluster) that they bought by acquiring Compaq (who bought it by
Symantec's Size. (Score:2)
MS is #1 Oracle is #2. Are they #3 at this point?
Re:Symantec's Size. (Score:2)
Re:Symantec's Size. (Score:2)
This would be good (Score:2)
All in all it could be a great merger. However having seen how both of the companies work it maybe a very difficult transition for the two companies to amalgamate properly. That could lead to problems.
actually... (Score:3, Interesting)
If anyone in the support industry has been watching Veritas lately, you'd know that while they offer some nice feature-rich products, said products generally don't always install out of the box and *work* properly. This has been a problem with niche OSes (i.e. Netware) for a few years and the problem is starting to creep into the Windows products (i.e. Backup Exec 9.x) as well. In fact, it reminds me of Computer Associates...
Symantec Products, regardless of what you think of them, generally work out of the box without much hassle. They are not perfect, but they're pretty feature-complete and work quite well. We use Symantec AntiVirus Corp. Edition a LOT in the field because it works and has a decent management interface--McAfee doesn't work as well, CA's eTrust doesn't have good management tools... etc. It's the _least bad_ of the products on offer (Trend Micro is pretty good too, but I still like the centralized Symantec AV Console--it's quite clean)
There aren't a lot of great feature-complete backup offerings out there (the archival storage industry has always lagged behind IMO - look at how expensive good-quality tape drives still are) thus Veritas *almost* has a monopoly on the market, especially for SMBs. As they've gotten bigger over the past few years (once they spun off from Seagate Software) the quality of their product has (I think) dropped dramatically.
I still like Symantec overall- they do a decent job considering the size of the company. They've still got some neat products. Their antivirus division is industry-leading. I can't say that about every huge software company out there... most generally start crumbling under their own weight.
So I'm optimistic...
(is it just my imagination, or can Backup Exec trace its lineage to Norton Backup?
is it:
Norton Backup -> Norton Backup Exec -> Seagate Software Backup Exec -> Veritas Backup Exec -> Symantec Backup Exec?
I could be dreaming)
Re:actually... (Score:2)
In-FUCKING-deed, yes!
Kevin Azzouz, former CEO of Arcada, once remarked that he had done some coding for Norton Backup, back in the day. So yes, it's true, there probably IS some relationship there.
Powerquest was also purchased by Symantec recently (Score:2)
Ah yes, let's l;ook at the record (Score:2)
Symantec. Ugh. (Score:2)
Veritas meanwhile, should prepare to change its name to Falsitas.
Extremely Worried (Score:2)
I work for a Veritas reseller and am a Veritas certified specialist in backup and HA for Solaris. I'm very worried that with this merger, focus will be taken off their Sol
Did you hear that sound? (Score:2)
Symantec: The Microsoft Of Utilities
Language buys out Truth (Score:2)
Fox News has wisely already made the adjustment.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
AT&T/Cingular made sense. Their networks are very similar.
Sprint is merging with Nextel, not Verizon. This makes less sense and they are looking to essentialy keep two seperate networks running.
what's a antivirus company want with a backup company?
What's the first thing you wonder when your network gets infected? When was the last time I backed up my data?
It's a perfect fit.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
I don't know the details of the deal, but it still seems to make sense to me. Each company gets all of the other's existing, contracted customers, kills off one competitor, and gains a whole lot of infrastructure. Eventually they'll either shift to one network, or find a way to make having two useful.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Funny)
What's the first thing you wonder when your network gets infected? When was the last time I backed up my data?
Or, "Why the %#!?& are we paying so much for anti-virus software that doesn't stop my network from getting infected!?!"
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Actually, Verizon was rumored to be looking into buying Sprint, even as Sprint was in the middle of buying NexTel. That news kinda gets lost in all the Sprint/NexTel noise though.
http://www.rednova.com/news/display/?id=111230 [rednova.com]
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Informative)
Nextel is going to be migrating their iDEN network to be based on cdma2000 (and therefore on the migration path for EV-DV, etc.) This is actually a good thing for Nextel, their walkie-talkies are popular, but as a cellphone network, they suck. Certainly, part of this will be making Sprint and Nextel's Push-to-talk offering compatible. Merging with Sprint will give both companies the opportunity for more growth (IMO) then apart.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Microsoft is finally integrating antivirus into Windows. This leaves Symantec without a bunch of their revenue. They need to branch out.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Let's hope that they do as good a job with this as they did integrating the browser. That will make me feel so much more sec... ah, wait.
Never mind...
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Where did you get the news that Microsoft is integrating an antivirus scanner into Windows? I recall them adding it to Exchange, but not into Windows. Now, XP SP 2 does monitor various antivirus software through the Windows Security thing, but that's not the same as Microsoft offering an antivirus scanner with Windows.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
They currently use Ghost for scheduled backup purposes (incremental, full, image). Hard to beat its ability to image a live system by "pushing" from the workstation to a shared network drive without any server-side software. This gives true full system restore capabilities since it's really a digital image, not just files, folders, and registry configurations.
= 9J =
Symantec does more than anti-virus... (Score:2)
Have a look at their enterprise product listing [symantec.com] to see what else is available.
Re:Huh? (Score:2, Informative)
Both are in the biz of protecting data (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
As an aside, nice Refused quote, "Fanning the flames of discontent" and "Shape of punk to come" are two of my all time favs, amazing stuff.
CB
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Veritas isn't a "backup" company. They provide enterprise storage solutions. I bet Veritas File System (VxFS) and Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) provide them with much more revenue then BackupExec and NetBackup.
I wonder what sort of effect (if any) this will have on HP's recent decision to scrap the integration of Tru64 clustering and volume management into HP-UX, and license Veritas products to bundle instead.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Great. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Money (Score:2)
Re:I guess.. (Score:2)
I mean you need a friggen PHD to run that software. Only one person in our NOC can really (I mean really) make it sing. A few others can muddle by with it. I think that it is overly complicated *I am not the backup guy*, as are pretty much all backup solutions.
-nB
Re:I guess.. (Score:4, Informative)
Oh, phrases, how I love thee.
One time, when I was the backup guy and I wasn't afraid to disclose my knowledge of backupexec, I became the *backup guy*. This damned me into restoring peoples resumes and digital pictures for the rest of my employment.
When he learns his lesson, he'll again become ignorant. For now, he probably just does it because it's an IT job and the pay is OK.
Re:I guess.. (Score:2)
Re:I guess.. (Score:2)
-nB
Re:I guess.. (Score:2)
Re:I guess.. (Score:2)
-nB
Re:I'm Sick of Mergers... (Score:3, Insightful)
The point is to reduce costs, increase profits, and give all that extra money to the hard working execs and the hard working wall street types who make the deal happen, and let enough dribble down to the investors so that they don't make a stink. Screw everyone else.
Re:I'm Sick of Mergers... (Score:2)
In this case that may not be true. It all depends on which way the control goes. Veritas support just plain sucks. Symantec for all their faults has good support. Personally I'd abandon both for CommVault and Trend, but if Symantec takes control, the service and support at Veritas will most likely improve.
Re:Symantec sucks. (Score:2)