Cloudscaling

Cloudscaling Group, Inc.
Private
Industry Cloud Computing
Founded San Francisco, California, United States (2006 (2006))
Founder Randy Bias, Adam Waters
Headquarters San Francisco, California, U.S.
Website Cloudscaling.com

The Cloudscaling Group, Inc., is a software company based in San Francisco, California, USA. The company’s Open Cloud System is a cloud computing system based on the OpenStack open-source software project. It is used to deploy infrastructure as a service (IaaS) public, private and hybrid clouds that support applications typically found on public cloud infrastructures such as Amazon Web Services or Google Compute Engine. These applications are often referred to as cloud-ready applications, which Cloudscaling refers to as dynamic applications and are contrasted with traditional enterprise IT applications.[1]

History

Cloudscaling was founded in 2006 by cloud architect and open source software advocate Randy Bias and co-founder Adam Waters. It was launched as a professional services company selling custom cloud infrastructure for large service providers, chiefly telecom service providers. The company’s engineering team had previously worked on cloud projects for Yahoo!, Amazon Web Services, VMware and Puppet Labs. KT Corporation (formerly Korea Telecom) was an early customer, for which the company in 2010 designed and deployed a cloud with CloudStack software and another that was the first OpenStack storage cloud (Swift) outside of Rackspace. Cloudscaling also designed and deployed an OpenStack Swift storage cloud for Internap in 2011.[2][3]

In February 2012, the company shifted its focus to become a product company, announcing version 1.0 of Open Cloud System.[4]

In early 2013, the company announced the general availability of Open Cloud System 2.0 and announced Ubisoft, Living Social and EVault as reference customers.[5][6] The company in April signed partnerships with both Seagate Technology and Juniper Networks,[7] both of which joined Trinity Ventures in a Series B round valued at $10 million.[8][9]

In October 2014, the company was purchased by EMC for an undisclosed sum.[10]

References

External links

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