Palo Alto looks to build up SD-WAN, SASE portfolio; take on Cisco, VMware with CloudGenix technology Credit: cloud With an eye towards significantly bolstering its edge networking offerings, Palo Alto has entered into an agreement to buy cloud-based SD-WAN vendor CloudGenix for $420 million in cash. Palo Alto said upon the completion of the acquisition it will integrate CloudGenix’s cloud-managed SD-WAN products to accelerate the intelligent onboarding of remote branches and retail stores into its Prisma Access package. Announced in May 2019, Palo Alto’s Prisma is a cloud-based security package that includes access control, advanced threat protection, user behavior monitoring and other services that promise to protect enterprise applications and resources. In November, Palo Alto brought SD-WAN support into Primsa with the introduction of Access, which the company described as a cloud-based, secure-access service edge (SASE) platform. Gartner says SASE-based systems meld features of edge computing, security, and wide-area networking (WAN) into a single cloud-managed package. “SASE is in the early stages of development. Its evolution and demand are being driven by the needs of digital business transformation due to the adoption of SaaS and other cloud-based services accessed by increasingly distributed and mobile workforces, and to the adoption of edge computing,” Gartner stated. Founded in 2013, CloudGenix’s flagship offering, AppFabric, lets customers set and manage application policies for WAN environments. Cloud-based AppFabric includes what the company calls Autonomous SD-WAN which “automatically builds the secure network and takes corrective actions when performance or availability issues are encountered.” The idea is to extend the breadth of the Prisma Access SASE platform, address network and security transformation requirements, and accelerate the shift from SD-WAN to SASE, Palo Alto stated. “Palo Alto had some lightweight SD-WAN offerings, and this move significantly adds to it because CloudGenix technology is strong,” said Lee Doyle, principal analyst at Doyle Research. “It’s the logical intersection between security and SD-WAN and significantly moves along Palo Alto’s move toward SASE.” The Palo Alto/CloudGenix combination will also go against some big SD-WAN players such as Cisco and VMware. With the CloudGenix buy, Palo Alto has made well over $1.4 billion worth of acquisitions in the past year or so, grabbing up security firms, Demisto, Twistlock and PureSec in 2019 alone. CloudGenix has roughly 250 customers, including companies in healthcare, finance, retail, and manufacturing, the company stated. Related content news Google Cloud issue blamed for UniSuper week-long service disruption A misconfiguration during provisioning triggered a previously unknown software bug, causing the deletion of UniSuper’s Private Cloud. By Elizabeth Montalbano May 08, 2024 4 mins Cloud Computing Data Center news IBM Power server targets AI workloads at the edge The Power S1012 server can be deployed in edge computing sites so IT teams can run AI inferencing workloads at the point of data and cut back on data transfers. By Michael Cooney May 08, 2024 3 mins Edge Computing Servers Data Center news HPE Aruba looks to fight AI threats with AI weapons HPE Aruba Networking Central gains AI-powered security observability and monitoring features. By Michael Cooney May 07, 2024 4 mins IoT Security Network Security news AI features boost Cisco's Panoptica application security software Cisco pads cloud-native security platform Panoptica with features that help customers protect containerized, microservice applications. By Michael Cooney May 07, 2024 5 mins Network Security Cloud Computing PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe