IceWEB To Acquire Computers & Tele-Comm, Build Business Cloud Storage, File Sharing Tech

IceWEB CEO Rob Howe

Storage vendor IceWEB is taking the leap to become a full-fledged cloud storage and file sharing services provider with its planned acquisition of Computers & Tele-Comm, a wireless Internet service provider and carrier-neutral network access point.

IceWEB, a Sterling, Va.-based developer of unified storage solutions that earlier this year introduced a business-class file sharing and synchronization service, on Monday said it plans to acquire Kansas City, Mo.-based Computers & Tele-Comm (CTC) for an as-yet undisclosed sum.

IceWEB CEO Rob Howe said the acquisition puts his company in position to offer a complete cloud storage solution that scales from an individual user wanting to use his or her iPad for work to the enterprise looking to offer cloud storage and secure file sharing and collaboration services.

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"This solution has moved into the cloud faster than anyone has anticipated," Howe said. "It's happening fast. Companies and departments, large and small, need to move to the cloud."

Security of data in the cloud is behind IceWEB's decision to acquire CTC, Howe said.

"Dropbox and Amazon are public clouds," he said. "But IBM's memo last year forbidding all employees, contractors and associates from using Dropbox drove home the message about data security. If someone leaves the company, the company loses access to their data on Dropbox, but that data stays on the cloud."

IceWEB early this year unveiled Icebox, a secure, on-premise business solution for remote access and synchronization of files, which Howe said some customers are hosting on-premise.

"But we'll see more and more customers looking for others to host such a service so they can have a private cloud without the need to manage it," he said.

With Computers & Tele-Comm, IceWEB gains the platform on which to build such as service as a complete solution for business customers, Howe said.

In addition to having its own data center and wireless Internet service provider capabilities, Computers & Tele-Comm is unique in that it is one of only a handful of network access points in the U.S., which Howe said means it has a direct connection to the carriers.

"So the latency in that place is the lowest you can get," Howe said. "It's right in the middle of the country, so users don't have to connect all the way across the country."

NEXT: New Services For The Channel

While most data centers are commodity deliverers of services, CTC has not only a higher speed offering but the ability to scale virtually infinitely, IceWEB's Howe said.

"Taken as a whole, we cover cloud storage end-to-end, from the guy who wants to use his iPad to the enterprise," he said. "Managed services, collocation and now Icebox, we have it all covered."

The next step for IceWEB is to push hard into the channel, Howe said. The company currently works with both direct and indirect channels, but it wants to develop a primarily channel-focused model.

"We can't get to everyone we need to reach on our own," he said. "We want a robust channel. Our margins are very rich for this. It's a quick sale. People want this now, and we can deliver it. We've been seeing the 'chart-ware' from others, but we can deliver it today."

Computers & Tele-Comm is itself a relatively new company. The Kansas City Business Journal reported that the private equity firm from which IceWEB acquired CTC had purchased Internet service providers Computers & Tele-Comm and KC Nap in January and merged them into one.

PUBLISHED MARCH 4, 2013