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Kemp Technologies

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Kemp
Company typePublic
IndustryTechnology
Founded1 November 2000; 23 years ago (2000-11-01)[1]
Headquarters989 Sixth Avenue, 16th Floor, New York City, New York, U.S. 10018
Key people
CEO: Ray Downes
Co-founder: Kevin W Mahon, CSO/Co-founder Peter Melerud
CTO: Pavel Minařík
CFO: George Lo
ProductsCloud load balancing
Application delivery controller
Load balancing
BrandsLoadMaster, Kemp 360 Central, Kemp 360 Vision
OwnerProgress Software
Websitekemp.ax

Kemp, Inc. is an American technology company that was founded in 2000 in Bethpage, New York and operates in the application delivery controller industry.[2] The company builds load balancing products which balances user traffic between multiple application servers in a physical, virtual or cloud environment.

In 2010, Kemp opened a European headquarters in Limerick, Ireland.[3] Edison Ventures, Kennet Partners and ORIX Venture Finance invested $16 million into the company for research and development, sales and marketing in early 2012.[4] In April 2014, Kemp announced a further investment in its Limerick Operations to expand from 30[5] positions to 80. Kemp was recognized as a Visionary in the 2015[6] Gartner Magic Quadrant for Application Delivery controllers and again in 2016.[7]

In 2019, Kemp was acquired by private equity firm Mill Point Capital.[8]

In November 2021, Kemp was acquired by Progress Software for $258 million.[9]

Business

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Kemp is a software company that develops load balancing and application delivery software built on a bespoke Linux operating system which is sold under the LoadMaster brand. As of 2019, there were over 100,000 deployments of LoadMaster globally[10] for customers that need high availability, scalability, security and visibility for their applications. This enables customers to scale their operations by delivering applications in a highly available manner with layer 4 to 7 load balancing, enhanced performance, and greater security. LoadMaster is available as a hardware appliance as well as a software-based load balancer that is available as a virtualized appliance and in the cloud including Microsoft Azure, Amazon AWS, and other private clouds.

Products

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Kemp LoadMaster

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Kemp's main product, the LoadMaster, is a load balancer[11] built on its own proprietary software platform called LMOS, that enables it to run on almost any platform: As a Kemp LoadMaster appliance, a Virtual LoadMaster (VLM) deployed on Hyper-V, VMware, on bare metal or in the public cloud.[12] KEMP is available in Azure, where it is in the top 15 deployed applications as well as in AWS and VMware vCloud Air.

Latest version of LMOS is 7.2.54.0, released April 2021.

In 2013, Kemp announced that it was adding Pre-Authorization, Single Sign-On (SSO) and Persistent Logging to its product range as a TMG alternative[13]

Geo Multi-Site DNS Load Balancer

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Kemp's DNS based Global Site Load Balancer (GSLB) enables customers to provide availability, scaling and resilience for applications that are geographically distributed, including data center environments, private clouds, multi-public cloud environments such as Azure and AWS as well as hybrid environments where applications are deployed across both public and private cloud. The capabilities provided by GEO LoadMaster are similar to hosted services such as Dyn DNS

VLM For Azure and AWS

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In March 2014, Kemp announced availability on the Microsoft Azure Cloud platform (the first 3rd party load balancer available) of the VLM for Azure LoadMaster,[14] a virtual load balancer.

Kemp 360 Central™

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In May 2016,[15] Kemp launched its centralized application monitoring and reporting product, called Kemp 360 Central™, which allows network and application administrators to view the state of different load balancers or application delivery controllers. Views include throughput, users and transactions per second. The product allows users to connect to 3rd party devices like F5, AWS ELB, NGINX, and HAProxy.

Kemp 360 Vision™

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At the same time as launching Kemp 360 Central, Kemp also announced the general release of 360 Vision, which monitors the health of applications. 360 Vision monitors patterns of application data, not just statistics, and is able to provide pre-emptive health alerts designed to prevent application outages.

Free LoadMaster

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In March 2015,[16] Kemp launched a free version of LoadMaster software called Free LoadMaster, which is a fully featured load balancer that shares most of the commercial product's features, including full layer 4 to layer 7 load balancing, reverse proxy, web content caching and compression, a non-commercial WAF (Web Application Firewall) and up to 20 Mbit/s throughput.

SDN

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Kemp announced and launched the world's first software-defined networking (SDN) ready adaptive load balancer and in September 2014, Kemp announced[17] it was joining the OpenDaylight Open Source SDN Project.

Service Mesh

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Kemp introduced service mesh[18] as part of its offering in 2018 and was listed as a company to watch by TechTarget.

Notes

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  1. ^ "KempTechnologies.com WHOIS, DNS, & Domain Info - DomainTools". WHOIS. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  2. ^ "EMA Radar for Application Delivery Controllers and Load Balancers: Q4 2011". Enterprise Management Associates. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  3. ^ "Kemp Tech Announce Euro HQ in Limerick". Limerick Post. Archived from the original on 6 December 2010. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  4. ^ "Investors bet $16 million on growth in application delivery market". Network World. Archived from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  5. ^ Newenham, Pamela (1 April 2014). "Kemp Technologies to create 50 new jobs in Limerick". Irish Times. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
  6. ^ Pettas, Paul. "Kemp Technologies Positioned As The Sole Visionary In The 2015 Gartner Magic Quadrant For Application Delivery Controllers". .prnewswire.com/ (Press release). CISION. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  7. ^ Jones, Erin. "KEMP Technologies Named as a Visionary in 2016 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Application Delivery Controllers". PRNewswire (Press release). CISION. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  8. ^ Longwell, Ali. "Kemp Acquired by Private Equity Firm Mill Point Capital". SDx Central. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  9. ^ "Progress Completes Acquisition of Kemp". Progress. 1 November 2021. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  10. ^ Gee, Mike. "US-based KEMP Technologies moves further into channel with partnering success story". ARN. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  11. ^ Bovberg, Json (11 June 2013). "KEMP Provides Smart Load Balancing". Windows IT Pro.
  12. ^ Talbot, Chris (24 September 2013). "KEMP Brings Layer 7 ADC to Windows Azure". talkincloud.com. Penton. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
  13. ^ "KEMP Technologies Adds Pre-Authorization, Single Sign-On (SSO) and Persistent Logging to Load Balancers as TMG Alternative". The Wall Street Journal. 21 May 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2013.. In 2014, Kemp expanded ESP 2.0 to provide more features.
  14. ^ "KEMP Technologies Expands Commercial Availability of Best-in-Class L7 Load Balancer Integrated Within Microsoft Azure". Market Wired. 27 March 2014.
  15. ^ Cox, Mark (10 May 2016). "KEMP 2.0 releases KEMP360 application delivery framework". channelbuzz.ca. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  16. ^ Schwartz, Jeffrey (12 March 2015). "Free Scaled-Down App Load Balancer Now Available for DevOps". Redmond Magazine. 1105 Media Inc. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  17. ^ Tozzi, Christopher. "kemp-and-infinera-join-opendaylight-open-source". The VAR Guy. TheVarGuy.com. Archived from the original on 9 September 2014. Retrieved 8 September 2014.
  18. ^ Doyle, Lee (25 January 2019). "What is a service mesh, and how does it relate to networking?". techtarget.com. Retrieved 1 December 2018.
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