E-mail vendor Mirapoint on Monday announced plans to release a version of its RazorGate e-mail security appliance that slides into IBM’s BladeCenter.
Slated for availability during the second half of the year, RazorGate on IBM’s BladeCenter will offer all the e-mail security
features of Mirapoint’s stand-alone RazorGate appliance, but with the scalability, low power consumption, and space-saving
benefits of a blade server, says Bethany Mayer, Mirapoint’s chief marketing officer. Mirapoint will demonstrate the RazorGate blade at RSA Conference 2007 this week.
Mirapoint’s target customers are mostly large enterprises and ISPs that already take advantage of blade servers, or are considering
moving to them, Mayer says. “The consolidation in the data center is real, and large customers are very interested in having
appliance vendors consider the possibility of taking their appliances and putting them onto someone else’s platform,” she
says.
One analyst says turning an e-mail appliance into a blade offers large enterprises room to grow.
“If you look at the form factor of blades, you can get much higher density than with regular appliances,” says Michael Osterman,
president of Osterman Research. This addition to its product line should help Mirapoint win over more large customers looking
to consolidate products, he says.
RazorGate includes antispam and antivirus software; Mirapoint's connection-management technology, which drops connections
from known spamming sources; junk-mail management tools for users; inbound and outbound message content-filtering; and policy
management features. RazorGate can scan more than 25 million e-mail messages per day, Mayer says.