While Trend Micro isn’t as flashy or loquacious as some of its competitors, the cloud security giant decided to use AWS re:Invent as an opportunity to humblebrag.
The new XDR offering combines the FireEye Helix platform with Amazon Inspector, aiming to offer better visibility and protection for applications and data in the cloud.
Armis is the fastest growing cybersecurity software company; Ericsson stock is down nearly 6% since its Vonage acquisition; and Samsung plans to build a $17B semiconductor fab.
Compared to VMware, “we continue to see a higher win ratio and we are much more disciplined in terms of our execution,” Nutanix CEO Rajiv Ramaswami said.
“We are in an age of explosive growth with respect to applications,” VMware CEO Raghu Raghuram said on the company’s third-quarter fiscal 2022 earnings call.
Deloitte ranks the 500 firms based on percentage fiscal year revenue growth from 2017 to 2020. Armis, which ranked No. 25 on the list, grew 8,826% over that period.
Analysts are bewildered by Ericsson’s $6.2B acquisition; sponsorship matters for women in cybersecurity; and Red Hat plans to deploy SASE across telecom infrastructure.
Red Hat doesn’t want to compete with established SD-WAN and cloud security vendors. Instead, the company sees an opportunity to orchestrate SASE deployments.
Kyndryl and VMware address multi-cloud challenges; the largest hyperscalers now own 700 data centers combined; and Palo Alto Networks reported $1.25 billion in Q1 revenue.
Qualcomm articulated a strategy to push its chipset platform into IoT; Fortinet integrated its SD-WAN with Azure vWAN; and Arista expanded its X-series switch family.
“In the event when you’re hunting down a threat, it can be a really long, cold winter between discovery and remediation if you lack visibility,” Cisco SVP Al Huger
“What you need is a holistic approach with solutions that accommodate the enterprise needs and the hyperscaler needs,” Arista Networks VP Martin Hull said.