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EMC confirms CEO change at VMware

Paul Maritz will step down from his role as CEO of VMware, to be replaced by EMC Chief Operating Officer Pat Gelsinger, EMC confirmed on Tuesday.

Maritz will instead become chief strategist of EMC, which is the majority owner of VMware. The news confirmed rumors of a change in VMware's leadership that had swirled throughout the day.

In addition, EMC CFO David Goulden was appointed president and chief operating officer of EMC, the storage giant said.

"Today we are witnessing an extraordinary transformation in the IT industry unlike anything we have seen before -- a major shift to cloud computing, big data applications and delivering IT-as-a-Service," EMC Chairman and CEO Joe Tucci said in a statement. EMC is making the changes to capitalize on the opportunity that presents, he said.

Maritz's new role will take effect Sep 1, according to EMC. It "grew out of discussions at the board of directors level," Maritz said during a conference call. "In discussing things with Joe and the board we felt this would be a right time to hand over the baton. Pat is supremely qualified to take VMware to the next level of the journey."

Maritz "will be actively directing" new product development efforts in his new role, he said during the call. "I will have my hands on."

Tucci intends to stay on as EMC CEO at least through 2013, and still expects his successor to be chosen from within the company, he said during the conference call.

EMC also announced preliminary financial results for the quarter. It expects to report US$5.31 billion in revenue, a rise of 10 percent. Non-GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) earnings per share were $0.39, up 11 percent, EMC said. The company also confirmed its full-year guidance of $22 billion in revenue and non-GAAP earnings per share of $1.70.

IDG News Service (Boston Bureau)



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We've been using Retrospect at our nonprofit for years.We use the OS X vsrieon, to back up mainly OS X machines (and a windows machine). It works quite well. Some have trouble figuring out the GUI and the various configuration options, and while they're not particularly straightforward, it's fine once you figure it out.I've never had trouble with it, and have done a handful of restores, with no problems.The newest windows vsrieon is better that the current OS X one; it can now do disk-to-disk-to-tape, which may be important depending on your setup.Configuring email notification can be a pain, it doesn't send emails natively but on OS X it uses AppleScript and a mail client to do so. Not sure what the windows vsrieon does.I found it to be a solid and affordable, though I'm considering moving to BRU, mainly due to lack of D2D2T (Mon, 2012-08-13 18:43)
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