Hewlett-Packard has announced it will spend more than $1 billion (£589m) on a public cloud programme based on the OpenStack open source platform. The HP Helion OpenStack data centres will bolster opportunities for its 110-plus service provider partners worldwide.
The move comes after a tough couple of years for the technology giant, which under the leadership of CEO Meg Whitman is seeking to restore its former glory. The company’s move will be channelled through its PartnerOne for Cloud partners to deliver and resell cloud services.
The cloud portfolio, known as HP Helion, is made up of a portfolio of OpenStack cloud products and services designed to help businesses build, manage and consume workloads in hybrid IT environments. To this end, HP said it will expand the availability of its cloud software, currently offered by two of its 80 data centres worldwide, to 20 data centres over the next 18 months.
HP was already committed to OpenStack, which was created by Rackspace and Nasa, and has strong backing from players including Red Hat, IBM and Oracle. The $1 billion investment over the next two years will be spent on cloud-related product and engineering initiatives, professional services.
The HP Helion portfolo will include both new cloud products and services, as well as existing ones. It will be made up of the following components:
“Customer challenges today extend beyond cloud. They include how to manage, control and scale applications in a hybrid environment that spans multiple technology approaches,” said Martin Fink, HP’s executive vice president and chief technology officer. “HP Helion provides the solutions and expertise customers need to select the right deployment model for their needs and obtain the greatest return for their investment.”
HP’s extended commitment to the OpenStack collaborative cloud computing platform will be welcomed by many, but the Wall Street Journal noted that HP’s $1 billion investment is not matching that of its rivals, such as Google, Microsoft and Amazon.
Those companies are spending $1 billion (£598m) to $2 billion (£1.2bn) a quarter, on top of their existing research and development budgets, to build data centres. IBM, Microsoft, Cisco for example have all recently announced significant investments in the cloud. It seems that HP’s investment could account for a substantial portion of its shrinking R&D budget. In the last fiscal year, HP’s R&D budget has fallen eight percent to $3.1 billion (£1.8bn).
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