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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: hlpinout who wrote (88954)1/19/2001 7:14:24 PM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
Compaq storage chief: It's all about
software

By Sonia R. Lelii, eWEEK
January 19, 2001 4:53 PM ET

NEW ORLEANS -- Compaq Computer Corp. has no
doubts about what will be the lynchpin technology in
storage in coming months: software.

"It is going to the be the key differentiator, and it will
probably be the only differentiator," said Mark Lewis,
who took the reins this week from Howard Elias as vice
president and general manager of Compaq's Enterprise
Storage Group. "We are going to be focusing on two
areas. The first is service providers and the other is
software."

While the Houston-based company is in the midst of a
price war to sell off a backlog of PCs as a result of
sluggish holiday sales, executives in Compaq's
Enterprise Storage Group are feeling upbeat about their
position. They are the number-two supplier worldwide of
disk storage systems as well as the number-two
supplier in overall revenue, according to preliminary
2000 figures from International Data Corp. in
Framingham, Mass.


"We are doing phenomenally well," Lewis said in an
interview at Compaq's ENSA@Work 2001 Storage
Conference here. "You won't see any radical [change in
direction] from me because I, and a few others, created
this strategy. We've built a strong strategy."

Among the key points of Compaq's storage strategy are
an emphasis on open SANs (storage area networks)
and developing management software for storage so IT
managers can efficiently handle the mountains of data
stockpiled as a result of the Internet. Compaq is in the
process of developing VersaStor, intelligent software
that essentially creates logical pools of storage
capacity from the physical disk drives.

Last year, Compaq entered a formal partnership with
IBM, in which the two companies will be sharing and
selling each other's storage technology. Compaq sees
this as a way to double its sales force and as an
opportunity to build interoperability between the
companies' storage systems. On Monday, Compaq will
announce its StorageWorks SAN topology roadmap,
which includes increasing the number of switches --
from four to 20 -- and ports -- from 52 to 300 -- its
technology supports so that IT managers can cross-link
more SAN islands together using Brocade
Communications Inc.'s switches.

Compaq is reselling IBM's Enterprise Storage Server
(also known as Shark) and has changed its name to
the StorageWorks Centralized Shared Storage (or CSS)
2105. The device will be available for volume shipments
starting next week, and it already has demonstrated
interoperability with Compaq's storage device, the
Modular Array 8000, Compaq officials said.

Free hardware eventually?

In other storage news, the company has allocated $100
million in capital investment this year in storage-related
companies, compared to $50 million last year. The
money will be used in deals similar to the $20 million
investment in HighGround Systems Inc., which recently
was bought by Sun Microsystems Inc.

"[The $100 million] is purely external. It is equity
investment in outside companies," Lewis said. "In some
cases, we like the technology but we don't see it
relating to Compaq's strategy. In other cases, we
partner with the company like we did with HighGround."

The other area in which Compaq is building its storage
foundation is storage management software. Company
officials are looking to double the number of their
software developers from 200 to 400 this year. Lewis
said storage hardware is getting cheaper as the price
per megabyte drops and disk drives become faster.

"Eventually, the hardware is going to be free," Lewis
said. "The cost per megabyte is going to be so small it
won't be a factor because you will get capacity and it
will be virtually free. In terms of value, it is going to
move into the software. The percentage of money spent
in storage software will be a lot higher."