This article is more than 1 year old

Violin Memory in SECRET $2bn FLOAT PLAN, whisper snitches

Hm, a technology float that isn't just a website?

Flash array start-up Violin Memory has filed for an initial public offering* worth up to $2bn, according to Bloomberg, which quoted two undisclosed sources.

The report says three banks are involved: JPMorgan Chase, Deutsche Bank, and Bank America Corp. Violin Memory is led by CEO Don Basile, formerly the CEO of Fusion-io, which went public after his departure in an IPO worth $1.5bn. Violin has so far raised an impressive total of $186m in funding. It makes a line of networked storage arrays using its own flash memory cards and controllers and offers much enhanced data access speed compared to disk drive arrays.

Recently the company agreed a deal with VMware to have vSphere running on processors inside its arrays, bringing compute and storage together for faster application execution. It has a software application strategy heading towards HANA - SAP is an investor - as well as Hadoop appliances. Recently, Violin inked a deal with Symantec to use its data management software.

The IPO date has not been revealed yet but, no doubt, Violin investors and stock option holders are hoping for a happy Christmas and a prosperous New Year. ®

*Under the JOBS Act, companies with annual revenues of less than $1bn are permitted to keep their public offering plans confidential with the US Securities and Exchange Commission until three weeks before the float.

More about

More about

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like