Symantec
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Symantec Corporation | |
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Type | Public (NASDAQ: SYMC) |
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Founded | (1982) |
Headquarters | Cupertino, California, USA (incorporated in Delaware) |
Key people | John W. Thompson, CEO |
Industry | computer software |
Products | Brightmail Enterprise Vault i3 Symantec Mail Security Instant Messaging Manager WinFax PRO Norton AntiVirus Norton Commander Norton Internet Security Norton 360 Norton Personal Firewall Norton SystemWorks Procomm Plus Symantec Ghost VxFS VxVM VxSF NetBackup Veritas Backup Exec Cluster Server (VCS) Veritas Enterprise Administrator Veritas Volume Replicator (VVR) Veritas SANPoint |
Revenue | ![]() |
Net income | ![]() |
Employees | 16,000 (2006) [1] |
Website | www.symantec.com |
Symantec Corporation NASDAQ: SYMC, founded in 1982, is an international corporation which sells computer software, particularly in the realms of security and information management. Headquartered in Cupertino, California, USA, Symantec has operations in more than forty countries.
Symantec first became well-known as the publisher of Q & A, a dual-mode product that was both a word processor and a database. During the 1990s, Symantec switched focus away from development of its own products and towards acquisition of other companies. An early purchase gave Symantec ownership of Norton Utilities, created in the mid-1980s by software engineer Peter Norton. At one time Symantec was also known for its development tools, particularly the THINK Pascal, THINK C, Symantec C++, and Visual Cafe packages that were popular on the Macintosh and IBM PC compatible platforms; they exited this business in the late-1990s as competitors such as Metrowerks, Microsoft, and Borland gained significant market share.
In recent years, Symantec has been primarily known for its Norton-branded antivirus and utility software. Products released under the Symantec name include Norton AntiVirus, Norton Commander, Norton Internet Security, Norton 360, Norton Personal Firewall, Norton SystemWorks (which now contains Norton Utilities), Norton AntiSpam, Norton GoBack (formerly Roxio GoBack), and Norton Ghost (originally published by Binary Research).
Due to the 2003 acquisition of PowerQuest, Symantec continues to sell, but not develop, the last version of PartitionMagic, now called Norton PartitionMagic. This is true as well of the NetWare partition manager, ServerMagic. PowerQuest's Drive Image was replaced by Norton Ghost.
Symantec is also an industry leader in comprehensive electronic messaging security, offering solutions for instant messaging, antispam, antivirus, legal compliance, content compliance, legal discovery and message archiving.
The Symantec Security Response organization (formerly Symantec Antivirus Research Center) is one of the foremost antivirus and computer security research groups in the industry.
On December 16, 2004, VERITAS and Symantec announced their plans for a merger. With VERITAS valued at $13.5 billion, it was the largest software industry merger to date.
Symantec's shareholders on June 24, 2005 voted to approve the company's merger with VERITAS, and the deal closed successfully on July 2. July 5, 2005 was the first day of business for U.S. offices of the new, combined software company.
[edit] Acquisitions
Symantec has acquired many companies which gave it the technologies that it uses to produce its current software. For the list of acquisitions, see List of Symantec acquisitions.
[edit] See also
- John W. Thompson
- Gordon Eubanks (former CEO)
- Symantec software
- Norton 360
- Backup Exec
[edit] External links
- Symantec Official Website
- VERITAS Official Website
- Symantec's most recent conference call transcripts
- Symantec's UK Security Operations Centre (SOC) bunker
- Symantec Security Response Weblog
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