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!!! Overview
Novell helps businesses work more efficiently and collaborate more effectively. Our portfolio includes solutions for the collaboration, data management, and endpoint management markets. With Novell's solutions, businesses can reach new levels of productivity while minimizing cost, complexity and risk.
!! [Private Enterprise Number]
[{$pagename}] has an [Private Enterprise Number] [OID] assigned prefix of [2.16.840.1.113719]
!! 2014-11-20
On 20 November 2014, [Micro Focus] completed its merger with the [Attachmate Group] of companies and began a period of integration planning which is now complete. The key objective throughout the work has been our continued commitment to deliver the highest levels of service and business value to our customers. I am pleased to confirm the following important points:
!! 2010-11-22
Novell, Inc. (NASDAQ: NOVL), the leader in intelligent workload management, today announced that it has entered into a definitive merger agreement under which [Attachmate Group] would acquire Novell for $6.10 per share in cash in a transaction valued at approximately $2.2 billion. [Attachmate Group] is owned by an investment group led by Francisco Partners, Golden Gate Capital and Thoma Bravo. Novell also announced it has entered into a definitive agreement for the concurrent sale of certain intellectual property assets to CPTN Holdings LLC, a consortium of technology companies organized by Microsoft Corporation, for $450 million in cash, which cash payment is reflected in the merger consideration to be paid by [Attachmate Group].
!! [{$pagename}] History
[{$pagename}] company began in [1979|Year 1979] in Orem, Utah as [Novell Data Systems Inc]. ([NDSI]), a hardware manufacturer producing [CPM]-based systems. Former [Eyring Research Institute] ([ERI]) employee Dennis Fairclough was the member of the original team that started Novell Data Systems. It was co-founded by George Canova, Darin Field, and Jack Davis. Victor V. Vurpillat brought the deal to Pete Musser, chairman of the board of Safeguard Scientifics, Inc., who provided the seed funding.
The company initially did not do well. The microcomputer produced by the company was comparatively weak against performance by competitors.
In order to compete on systems sales Novell Data Systems planned a program to link more than one microcomputer to operate together. The former [ERI] employees [Drew Major], [Dale Neibaur] and [Kyle Powell], known as the [SuperSet Software Group], were hired to this task.
At [ERI], Fairclough, Major, Neibaur and Powell had worked on government contracts for the Intelligent Systems Technology Project, and thereby gained an important insight into the [ARPANET] and related technologies, ideas which would become crucial to the foundation of [Novell INC].
The Safeguard board then ordered Musser to shut Novell down. Musser contacted two Safeguard investors and investment bankers, Barry Rubenstein and Fred Dolin, who guaranteed to raise the necessary funds to continue the business as a software company as Novell Data Systems' networking program could work on computers from other companies.
Davis left Novell Data Systems in November 1981, followed by Canova in March 1982.
Rubinstein and Dolin, along with Jack Messman, interviewed and hired [Ray Noorda]. The required funding was obtained through a rights offering to Safeguard shareholders, managed by the Cleveland brokerage house, Prescott, Ball and Turben, and guaranteed by Rubenstein and Dolin.
In 1983, Ray Noorda took over leadership of Novell and engaged the SuperSet group to work on networking products. The team was originally assigned to create a CP/M disk sharing system to help network the CP/M hardware that Novell was selling at the time. Under [Ray Noorda]'s leadership, the group developed a successful file sharing system for the newly introduced IBM-compatible PC.
Major, Neibaur and Powell continued to support Novell through their [SuperSet Software Group].
In January 1983, the company's name was shortened to Novell, Inc., and Raymond Noorda became the head of the firm. Later that same year, the company introduced its most significant product, the multi-platform network operating system (NOS), Novell NetWare.
It is distributed by TriTech Distribution Limited in Hong Kong.[4]
!! [NetWare]
The first Novell product was a proprietary hardware [server] based on [Motorola] 68000 CPU supporting six MUX ports per board for a maximum of four boards per server using a star topology with twisted pair cabling. A [network interface card] ([NIC]) was developed for the IBM PC industry standard architecture (ISA) bus. The server was using the first [Network Operating System] ([NOS]) called [ShareNet]. Later, [ShareNet] was ported to run on the Intel platform and renamed [NetWare]. The first commercial release of [NetWare] was [version] 1.5.
[Novell INC] based its network [protocol] on [Xerox Network Systems] ([XNS]), and created its own standards from IDP and [SPP], which it named [Internetwork Packet Exchange] and [Sequenced Packet Exchange] ([SPX]). File and print services ran on the [Netware Core Protocol] ([NCP]) over [IPX], as did [Routing Information Protocol] ([RIP]) and [Service Advertising Protocol] ([SAP]).
[NetWare] uses Novell DOS (formerly DR-DOS) as a boot loader. Novell DOS is similar to MS-DOS and IBM PC DOS, but no extra license for DOS is required; this came from the acquisition of [Digital Research] in [1991|Year 1991]. Novell had already acquired Kanwal Rekhi's company Excelan, which manufactured smart ethernet cards and commercialized the internet protocol TCP/IP, solidifying Novell's presence in these niche areas.
It was around this time also that Ed Tittel, author of HTML For Dummies, became involved with Novell. Tittel took up various positions within the newly acquired Excelan, becoming national marketing manager for Novell, before being named as Novell's director of technical marketing.
Novell did extremely well throughout the [1980s]. It aggressively expanded its market share by selling the expensive ethernet cards at cost. By 1990, Novell had an almost monopolistic position in NOS for any business requiring a network.
With this market leadership, Novell began to acquire and build services on top of its NetWare operating platform. These services extended NetWare's capabilities with such products as NetWare for SAA, Novell multi-protocol router, GroupWise and BorderManager.
!! More Information
There might be more information for this subject on one of the following:
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* [#1] - [Novell|Wikipedia:Novell|target='_blank'] - based on information obtained 2016-05-09
* [#2] - [Novell|https://ipfs.io/ipfs/QmXoypizjW3WknFiJnKLwHCnL72vedxjQkDDP1mXWo6uco/wiki/Novell.html|target='_blank'] - based on information obtained 2019-05-09