Symantec to buy ON Technology for $100M
It will use the technology in its line of enterprise security administration products
October 27, 2003 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
Symantec Corp. continued to strengthen its standing as a seller of enterprise security technology today, announcing plans to purchase ON Technology Corp., a maker of remote PC management technology, for $100 million in cash.
Waltham, Mass.-based ON is a publicly traded company that makes products designed to enable network administrators to inventory and manage the desktop computers, servers and mobile devices on LANs and WANs. Under the terms of the deal, Symantec will pay $4 for each share of ON stock. The deal is expected to close by March 2004.
Symantec will use ON's technology to enhance its line of enterprise security administration products, with the goal of giving customers the ability to spot and patch security holes in their computer network, Symantec said in a statement.
For example, ON's iCommand product allows administrators to use a Web-based portal to coordinate a variety of activities, such as pushing out new operating systems, software applications or security patches to computers or mobile devices on their networks or to remote systems outside of the organization's firewall, according to ON.
ON's technology is already being used with Symantec's Ghost software cloning and restoration product to centrally deploy Ghost "images" (snapshots of an operating system or application configuration) that are used to restore compromised or malfunctioning systems, Symantec said.
While Ghost performs many of the same functions as ON's technology, it lacks features to track and manage large numbers of computers on a network, making it a tough sell for enterprise customers, according to Eric Ogren, an analyst at The Yankee Group in Boston.
In recent months, Symantec has attempted to tailor Ghost for enterprise use. The company released Ghost 8.0 Corporate Edition last week, which included new features for sending out software hot fixes or operating system configuration changes to multiple workstations at once and reduce the amount of bandwidth needed to send Ghost images back and forth over the network.
With the ON technology, Symantec now has a "network aware" product that can do what Ghost does. If it's successfully integrated into Symantec's Enterprise Security Architecture, the ON technology will allow Symantec customers to manage network device security from their desktops or from a Web interface over the Internet, Ogren said.
While the purchase of ON won't remake Symantec's enterprise security business, it will help the company compete against other, larger companies with an interest in network device management, including Microsoft Corp., Ogren said.
Like ON's products, Microsoft's Systems Management Server also enables companies to centrally manage software deployment to PCs, serversand mobile devices.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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