Barracuda's move to close its two data protection and file sync and share services was revealed in a company blog post, but Barracuda is not commenting on a report it is seeking a buyer for the entire company.
Bit9+Carbon Black, which does 80 percent of its business through channel partners, has shortened its name to Carbon Black as it tries to elevate its channel presence in an expanding endpoint security market.
Apple's iPad Pro, a detachable 2-in-1 released in November, outsold Microsoft's competing Surface Pro tablets in the holiday quarter, according to a report by market researcher IDC.
Dell Security has launched a new identity and access management solution for privileged account management that will open the door to big new opportunities for partners.
IBM's Raghavan Srinivas explained why the traditional approach to big data collection and analysis is wrong, and how big data will transform artificial intelligence.
InterKnowlogy, a tiny Microsoft application development partner, has built apps that it claims will avoid a repeat of the voting glitches that hounded Republicans during the 2012 Iowa Caucus.
AppSense is the top vendor in the small yet important user environment management space, but these days it's getting even more attention for its endpoint security capabilities.
Zerto has brought in a top-notch product management executive with experience at NetApp and HPE to coordinate the company's product road map -- a road map that is being supercharged with part of those new funds.
As of market close Friday, Symantec has officially completed its split from Veritas with the sale of the storage division to The Carlyle Group for $7.4 billion.
Here are the important details about the split of Xerox into two public companies, which the hardware manufacturer and solution provider announced Friday.
The new solution from storage startup Datrium connects up to 32 industry-standard servers with commodity SSDs to its external storage to bring high-performance flash storage with a cost of 10 cents per Gbyte.
Xerox's planned split into two companies, one for products and one for services, could be a help to its channel partners, who hailed the solution provider's announcement Friday.
Pankaj Patel, Cisco's chief development officer, is heading for the door, leaving partners asking who will lead the networking giant's future technology strategy.
Cirrity CEO Steve Vicinanza details how partners can achieve higher margins through its 100 percent channel program, which focuses on enabling resellers to migrate to cloud services.
Ursula Burns emphasizes that Xerox's board of directors – and not activist investor Carl Icahn – decided to break up the company into two parts, but that Icahn supported the split.