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Cobalt Networks

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Computer appliance company (1996–2000)
Cobalt Networks, Inc.
Founded1996; 30 years ago (1996)
FounderVivek Mehra
DefunctDecember 7, 2000; 25 years ago (2000-12-07)
FateAcquired bySun Microsystems
HeadquartersMountain View, California
RevenueIncrease $22 million (1999)
Decrease -$23 million (1999)
Total assetsIncrease $151 million (1999)
Total equityIncrease $130 million (1999)
Number of employees
140 (1999)
Footnotes / references
[1]
Cobalt RaQ 2
Cobalt Qube - acomputerserver appliance

Cobalt Networks was a maker of low-costLinux-basedservers andserver appliances based inMountain View, California. The company had 1,900 end user customers in more than 70 countries.[1]

During thedot-com bubble, the company had amarket capitalization of $6 billion, despite only $22 million in annual revenue.

In 2000, the company was acquired bySun Microsystems and in December 2003, Sun shut down the Cobalt product line.[2]

Cobalt was considered a pioneering server appliance vendor, the first to market a 1 RU rackmounted server, and was credited by the founder ofRLX Technologies as paving the way forblade servers.[2]

History

[edit]

The company was founded in 1996 by Vivek Mehra as Cobalt Microserver. In June 1998, the company changed its name to Cobalt Networks, Inc.[3]

The company introduced products as follows:[1]

ProductLaunch date
Cobalt QubeMarch 1998
Cobalt CacheJuly 1998
Cobalt RaQSeptember 1998
Cobalt NASApril 1999
Cobalt Management ConsoleOctober 1999

On November 5, 1999, the company became apublic company via aninitial public offering. Its stock price rose as much as 618% above its $22/share initial price.[4]

On March 23, 2000, the company announced the acquisition of Chilisoft fromCharlie Crystle for 1.15 million shares of Cobalt common stock, then valued at $69.9 million.[5][6]

In September 2000,Sun Microsystems announced the acquisition of the company for $2 billion in stock.[7] The acquisition was completed on December 7, 2000. Many disgruntled engineers left the company in the months following the acquisition.[8]

In December 2003, Sun shut down the Cobalt product line,[2]with the dual-processor Raq 550 being its last appliance server.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Commerce One, Inc. 2000 Form 10-K Annual Report".U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  2. ^abcVance, Ashlee (December 18, 2003)."Sun drives the final nail in Cobalt's coffin".The Register.
  3. ^"Company Overview of Cobalt Networks, Inc".Bloomberg L.P.
  4. ^"Cobalt IPO rockets".CNN. November 5, 1999.
  5. ^"COBALT NETWORKS IS BUYING CHILISOFT FOR $70 MILLION".The New York Times.Dow Jones & Company. March 24, 2000.
  6. ^Uimonen, Terho (March 23, 2000)."Cobalt to Acquire Chili Soft in $70M Deal".Computerworld. Archived fromthe original on 2018-05-06.
  7. ^FISHER, LAWRENCE M. (September 20, 2000)."Sun Microsystems to Acquire Cobalt for $2 Billion in Stock".The New York Times.
  8. ^Loney, Matt (January 5, 2004)."How to blow a billion--or two".ZDNet.
  9. ^"Sun sunsets Cobalt".CNET. Retrieved2026-01-25.
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