Dell EMC

Dell EMC (until 2016, EMC Corporation) is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Hopkinton, Massachusetts and Round Rock, Texas, United States.[1] Dell EMC sells data storage, information security, virtualization, analytics, cloud computing and other products and services that enable organizations to store, manage, protect, and analyze data. Dell EMC's target markets include large companies and small- and medium-sized businesses across various vertical markets.[2][3] The company's stock (as EMC Corporation) was added to the New York Stock Exchange on April 6, 1986,[4] and was also listed on the S&P 500 index.

Dell EMC
TypeSubsidiary
IndustryComputer storage
Founded1979 (1979)
Founders
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsSee EMC products
ParentDell Technologies
Websitewww.dellemc.com

EMC was acquired by Dell in 2016; at that time, Forbes noted EMC's "focus on developing and selling data storage and data management hardware and software and convincing its customers to buy its products independent of their other IT buying decisions" based on "best-of-breed."[5] It was later renamed to Dell EMC. Dell uses the EMC name with some of its products.[6]

Pre-Dell EMC acquired Iomega in 2008;[7] Dell EMC formed a partnership with Lenovo in 2013, named LenovoEMC that superseded and rebranded Iomega.[8]

History

Richard Egan, co-founder of EMC Corporation

EMC, founded in 1979 by Richard Egan & Roger Marino (the E & M in EMC),[9] introduced its first 64-kilobyte (65,536 bytes) memory boards for the Prime Computer in 1981[10][11] and continued with the development of memory boards for other computer types. In the mid-1980s, the company expanded beyond memory to other computer data storage types and networked storage platforms. EMC began shipping its flagship product, the Symmetrix, in 1990. Symmetrix was the main reason for EMC's rapid growth in the 1990s, both in size and value, from a company valued in the hundreds of millions of dollars to a multi-billion dollar company.[12]

In 2009 EMC signed a two-year deal to be the principal shirt sponsor for English Rugby Union club London Wasps in a deal worth £1 Million. This was later extended until the end of the 2013 season.

Michael Ruettgers joined EMC in 1988 and served as CEO from 1992 until January 2001.[13] Under Ruettgers' leadership, EMC revenues grew from $120 million to nearly $9 billion 10 years later, and the company shifted its focus from memory boards to storage systems.[14] Ruettgers was named one of BusinessWeek's "World's Top 25 Executives"; one of the "Best Chief Executive Officers in America" by Worth magazine; and one of Network World's "25 Most Powerful People in Networking".[14]

Some of EMC's growth was via acquisitions of small companies.[15]

Acquisition by Dell

EMC Corporation logo prior to merger

On October 12, 2015, Dell Inc. announced its intent to acquire EMC in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $67 billion, which has been considered the largest-ever acquisition in the technology sector. This would combine Dell's enterprise server, personal computer, and mobile businesses with EMC's enterprise storage business in a significant Vertical merger of IT giants. Dell would pay $24.05 per share of EMC, and $9.05 per share of tracking stock in VMware.[16][17][18]

On September 7, 2016, Dell Inc. completed the merger with EMC Corp., which involved the issuance of $45.9 billion in debt and $4.4 billion common stock.[19][20] At the time, some analysts claimed that Dell's acquisition of the former Iomega could harm the LenovoEMC partnership.[21]

Products and services

In addition to those of the majority-owned Pivotal company, Dell EMC sells products and services, including products from other Dell Technologies companies, designed to allow IT departments to move to a cloud computing model and to analyze big data. LenovoEMC, formerly Iomega, sells storage products.[8]


Product categoryProducts/Services
Information StoragePowerMax, VMAX3 Family, VNX/VNXe Family, Isilon, Atmos, XtremIO, ScaleIO, Unity/Unity XT Family, PowerStore, ECS
Archiving, Backup, and RecoveryAvamar, DataDomain, NetWorker, RecoverPoint, Centera, SourceOne
Storage and Content ManagementService Assurance Suite, Appsync, PowerPath, ViPR SRM, ViPR Controller
VirtualizationVMware, VPLEX
ServicesConsulting, Customer support, Education Services, Managed Services, Technology Services and Solutions
Security/ComplianceRSA Security, Dell SecureWorks
Cloud computing/Converged InfrastructureVxBlock, VxRack, VxRail, VSPEX, Virtustream
Data ComputingGreenplum, Pivotal

Major acquisitions

The following table includes the listing and timeline of EMC Corporation's major acquisitions of other companies since 1996.

YearStorageStorage & management softwareContent managementVirtualizationServicesSecurity/complianceCloud computingData computing
1996–2000Data General,[22] CrosStor[23]Softworks,[24] Avalon[25]
2001–2005FilePool,[26] Allocity[27]Luminate,[28] Prisa Networks,[29] Legato Networker,[30] Dantz/Retrospect,[31] Smarts Astrum[32][33]Documentum,[34] Ask Once,[35] Acartus,[36] Captiva Software[37]VMware[38] Rainfinity,[39] Acxiom[40]Internosis[41]
2006–2010Avamar,[42] Iomega,[43] Data Domain,[44] Isilon Systems[45] Bus-Tech,[46] Indigo Stone[47]Kashya,[48] nLayers,[49] Voyence,[50] Infra Corporation,[51] WysDM,[52] Configuresoft,[53] Fastscale[54]Pro Activity,[55] X-Hive,[56] Dokumentum, Document Sciences,[57] Kazeon[58]Akimbi,[59] YottaYottaInterlink,[60] Geniant,[61] Business Edge,[62] Conchango[63]RSA Security,[64] Authentica,[65] Network Intelligence,[66] Valyd,[67] Verid,[68] Tablus,[69] Archer Technologies[70]Mozy,[71] Pi,[72] Source Labs[73]Greenplum[74]
2011–presentXtremIO,[75] Likewise[76] ScaleIO[77]Watch4Net,[78] iWave,[79] TwinStrata[80]Syncplicity[81](spun off in 2015)[82]Syncplicity[81](spun off in 2015),[82] Trinity Technologies[83]AsankyaNetwitness,[85] Silicium Security,[86] Silver Tail Systems[87] AveksaVirtustream[88]ZettaPoint,[89] Pivotal Labs,[90] MoreVRP[91]

Big data projects

In 2012, EMC sponsored The Human Face of Big Data,[92] a globally crowdsourced media project focusing on the ability to collect, analyze, triangulate and visualize vast amounts of data in real-time. The Human Face of Big Data, produced by Rick Smolan and Jennifer Erwitt, includes "a number of fascinating stories ... [that] represent some of the most innovative applications of data that are shaping our future".[93]

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