Acquisitions boost IBM's Tivoli line
Published: 06 Oct 2006 10:00 BST
On Friday, IBM is expected to outline changes to its Tivoli systems management product line, bringing in features garnered from a string of acquisitions.
In addition, the company also intends to unveil within weeks its road map for adding products from its purchase of MRO Software, a deal that is expected to close "very soon", said Al Zollar, the general manager of IBM's Tivoli division.
Overall, IBM is looking to provide unified management tools that can keep track of IT gear as well as of physical assets, such as trucks or shipping containers, with electronic sensors. MRO Software's Maximo application is designed to manage equipment such as power plants.
"Non-IT assets are getting embedded chips, embedded software stacks and IP [Internet protocol] addresses," Zollar said. "They have to be managed just like servers and desktops."
IBM has bought several smaller companies in the management area in the past year, and it has begun integrating their technologies with its Tivoli suite.
It has added visualisation tools, gained from its purchase of MicroMuse, to the Tivoli Change and Configuration Management database. The database already incorporates software from its acquisition of another company, Collation.
Available later this month, the new configuration database can present different management-related information to different users.
For example, it can show high-level IT executives whether a specific business service, such as an order management application, is operating, while another user interface will show administrators whether specific hardware components are failing, Zollar explained.
Also, in the fourth quarter of this year, IBM will introduce a new product called IBM Tivoli Capacity Process Manager, designed for automating the job of adding server and storage resources.








