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Network performance-management vendor Fluke Networks this week expanded its product portfolio when it acquired for an undisclosed sum the intellectual property of VoIP management player Viola Networks.
The deal brings to Fluke Networks the technologies and source code the now-defunct Viola Networks used to underpin its NetAlly product line. NetAlly offered such products as its Lifecycle manager, which was designed to determine problem areas in LAN and WAN infrastructure before a VoIP implementation goes live, as well as monitor production environments for VoIP quality and performance. Viola formerly competed with Fluke Networks, as well as with products from Apparent Networks, NetIQ and Brix Networks.
View a slide show of 2008's hottest tech M&A deals.
Industry watchers say combining predeployment assessment capabilities, such as those in NetAlly, with production monitoring will improve VoIP performance and reduce costs.
"Nemertes Research has found that companies deploying third-party, VoIP-focused management tools can reduce per-user IP-telephony operating costs by as much as 90%," said John Burke, principal research analyst for Nemertes. "The more fully a tool set can address the complete life cycle of VoIP in the enterprise, the greater the role it can play in such deployments."
This buy follows other performance-management purchases in Fluke Networks' recent history. For example, the company picked up Crannog Software in early 2007 and acquired Visual Networks in 2005. The goal, according to the vendor's upper management, is to provide a complete performance-management product, from preassessment capabilities through monitoring VoIP in production environments.
"Our prior integrations of the NetFlow Tracker and Visual UpTime product lines, the recent release of Visual Performance Manager 4.0 . . . and now the purchase of NetAlly combine to give our Performance Management business the strength in people and product our customers require," said Paul Caragher, Fluke Networks' president, in a statement.
Fluke Networks' latest deal also exhibits the continuing consolidation of the network-management market. For instance, competitor NetScout last year acquired Network General, which had gone through several iterations as a company. Opnet purchased Network Physics, in another deal that whittled down the number of pure-play network management vendors.
Partner Content
NetScout and analyst Jim Metzler have teamed to deliver a series of IT Briefs on Network and Application Performance Management leveraging research from NetScout’s nGenius & Sniffer users.
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Metzler on CIO Priorities
The top five CIO priorities based on a survey of NetScout users revealing CIOs' top priorities and what they think they should be. Also includes interviews with CIOs of large organizations.
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Metzler on Application Delivery
How to eliminate the stovepiped or siloed nature of application delivery from both an organization and a technological perspective.
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Metzler on Network Troubleshooting
Overview of network troubleshooting that provides an assessment of where we are, and where we need to be relative to the complexities of today's IT challenges.
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