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Techcloud consolidation

Cisco to buy Piston in next wave of cloud consolidation

Barb Darrow
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Barb Darrow
Barb Darrow
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Barb Darrow
By
Barb Darrow
Barb Darrow
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June 3, 2015, 9:20 AM ET
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CloudscapePhotograph by Getty Images/Image Source

It was only a matter of time before someone snapped up Piston Cloud. And the winner is: Cisco. It is bringing the OpenStack-cloud oriented company aboard as part of its cloud services team, the company said Tuesday morning. The deal presumably helps Cisco catch up with Amazon in the public cloud race.

Terms were not disclosed, but as part of the deal Cisco gets 38 Piston employees, including engineers, developers and customer support people who will remain in Piston’s San Francisco offices, according to Scott Sanchez, director of product strategy for Cisco’s cloud efforts. The Piston team will join the (CSCO) Cloud Services group under Faiyaz Shahpurwala, senior vice president, Cloud Infrastructure and Managed Services Organization.

Cisco started out positioning itself as a sort of arms-dealer to other vendor’s clouds. It figured it could sell a ton of routers, switches and other gear to those customers. But the massive cloud providers don’t necessarily buy a ton of branded hardware for their data centers. So, last year it shifted and said it would build—with partners—a worldwide network of clouds, called Intercloud— running on OpenStack. It also bought Metacloud, a respected provider of managed OpenStack clouds in September.

Sanchez, who joined Cisco via the Metacloud deal, said Piston and Metacloud are a good “peanut-butter-and-jelly” match in that Piston focused on automated deployment capabilities that ease installation of OpenStack technology while Metacloud focused on operating the clouds once they were set up.

Cisco, like its legacy hardware rivals HP (HPQ) and IBM (IBM) are rushing to catch up with Amazon (AMZN) Web Services which leads the league by far, at least in shared public cloud infrastructure. Earlier today Coins2Day reported that Oracle (ORCL) has picked up intellectual property, as well as former employees, from Nebula, yet another OpenStack-focused company that shut down in April.

This story was updated at 9:42 a.m. EDT with Scott Sanchez’s comments and additional detail.

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Barb Darrow
By Barb Darrow
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