Verari Technologies, the San Diego, California, supplier of IT equipment has been renamed Cirrascale. This is a second name change for the company this year. Before it became Verari Technologies in January, it was Verari Systems, which became bankrupt and was bought out by one of its two original founders David Driggers.
Driggers led a group of investors that bought the former Verari Systems' intellectual property and assets in early 2010, including a factory in San Diego, and became the new company's chairman and CEO.
Under the new name Cirrascale, the company will continue supplying solutions based on Verari's BladeRack 2 series servers, with emphasis on cloud-based compute and storage products, according to Cirrascale President and COO Mark Brown. The company will also continue providing Forest, Verari data center containers.
"These products, based on Verari's patented Vertical Cooling Technology, generated over $500 Million in installed systems in the high performance computing and enterprise markets;these customer segments are the foundation of the burgeoning cloud market of today,"Brown said in a statement.
Driggers said the company will continue providing purpose-built data center infrastructure. Each solution will be based on collaboration with the customer who will define their platform themselves. Rack infrastructure will accommodate customer-defined power, density and cooling requirements.
The product-line will include low-power micro-servers, high-density storage, scale-out multi-core, HPC cluster and GP/GPU computing.
Driggers led a group of investors that bought the former Verari Systems' intellectual property and assets in early 2010, including a factory in San Diego, and became the new company's chairman and CEO.
Under the new name Cirrascale, the company will continue supplying solutions based on Verari's BladeRack 2 series servers, with emphasis on cloud-based compute and storage products, according to Cirrascale President and COO Mark Brown. The company will also continue providing Forest, Verari data center containers.
"These products, based on Verari's patented Vertical Cooling Technology, generated over $500 Million in installed systems in the high performance computing and enterprise markets;these customer segments are the foundation of the burgeoning cloud market of today,"Brown said in a statement.
Driggers said the company will continue providing purpose-built data center infrastructure. Each solution will be based on collaboration with the customer who will define their platform themselves. Rack infrastructure will accommodate customer-defined power, density and cooling requirements.
The product-line will include low-power micro-servers, high-density storage, scale-out multi-core, HPC cluster and GP/GPU computing.