Linux server management firm exits stealth mode

October 27, 2005, 09:47 AM —  IDG News Service — 

Centeris Corp. emerged from stealth mode to release the public beta version of its Likewise 1.0 software for managing Linux servers in a Microsoft Corp. Windows network Wednesday. The startup also announced it had raised over US$5 million in venture capital funding.

With many IT managers in midrange and enterprise companies struggling to manage combinations of Windows and Linux servers, Centeris hopes it's identified a strong market opportunity.

"The two platforms don't work well together," Barry Crist, Centeris chairman and chief executive officer, said in a phone interview Wednesday. "We allow Linux servers to have a specific role in a Windows network." The company is adopting a middle position or central point between Windows and Linux, hence its name, while its Likewise product name points to the ability to manage one environment just like the other, he added.

Likewise 1.0 is made up of several components. A systems administrator installs Likewise Console on their Windows machines and remotely installs Likewise Agent on their Linux servers. The administrator can then use Likewise Console to configure Linux server roles and join them to Microsoft's Active Directory. Then the administrator can manage and monitor Linux servers through Likewise Console and Microsoft Management Console (MMC).

The startup held a closed beta for its software with 20 users, according to Crist. Centeris expects to release the final version of Likewise 1.0 in December, he said. Pricing is already finalized at $350 for a perpetual license per server managed. "We want to make it very easy for customers to do business with us," Crist said. "People don't like the subscription pricing model as much as a perpetual license." The company also plans to offer support for Likewise at a cost yet to be determined.

Centeris has plans to open source a subset of Likewise later this year, according to Crist. The company is due to provide further details on the open-source product, including its name, next week at the Open Source Business Conference (OSBC) East taking place in Newton, Massachusetts, Nov. 1-2. Centeris may provide paid support for the open-source component of Likewise, he said.

The company's ultimate aim is to have the open-source software ship with Linux operating systems distributions, Crist said. Centeris is already in talks with Linux distributors as well as other potential partners, he added, with some announcements likely later this year. Until then, "We'll sell in a very efficient direct sales model," Crist said.

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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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