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Veeam & HPE deepen partnership to boost enterprise data resilience
Veeam & HPE deepen partnership to boost enterprise data resilience

Techday NZ

time26-06-2025

  • Business
  • Techday NZ

Veeam & HPE deepen partnership to boost enterprise data resilience

Veeam and HPE have expanded their strategic partnership with an integration between the Veeam Data Platform and HPE Morpheus VM Essentials Software, aiming to enhance data resilience and recovery for enterprise customers. The new collaboration will see Veeam deliver image-based backup support for HPE Morpheus VM Essentials Software, encompassing virtual machine migration and data portability across conventional hypervisor environments. This builds on a longstanding relationship between the two companies, which seek to offer unified data protection and simplified management for customers operating in increasingly complex IT landscapes. Supporting hybrid and private cloud By integrating Veeam Data Platform with HPE Morpheus VM Essentials, organisations are expected to gain a more seamless solution for safeguarding key applications and data across private and hybrid cloud infrastructures. Fidelma Russo, Executive Vice President of Hybrid Cloud and Chief Technology Officer at HPE, said: "Data is an organisation's most valuable asset – and often its most vulnerable. With our deep partnership and integration, HPE and Veeam are delivering unified virtualisation and data protection that is future-ready, giving customers the resiliency and agility to evolve their hybrid IT strategy." For customers making use of HPE Private Cloud solutions, or those with standalone servers, the solution is designed to provide unified protection across multiple hypervisors and facilitate VM mobility. Cost savings are also cited in the form of up to a 90 percent reduction in VM licence costs. Enterprise-grade resilience Anand Eswaran, Chief Executive Officer at Veeam, highlighted the dual pressures organisations face in managing expanding IT complexity and rising cyber risk: "Organisations face a perfect storm of IT complexity and cyber threats. Data resilience can no longer be an afterthought. Our enhanced partnership ensures organisations can deploy enterprise-grade virtualisation solutions from HPE with Veeam backup, recovery, security and intelligence for maximum data resilience that keeps businesses running." Both companies stress that comprehensive support for modern workloads is a focal point. Veeam's Kasten solution will be available to provide backup and recovery for containerised and cloud-native workloads, complementing the broader integration with Morpheus Software and the established HPE Zerto Software offering. The solutions together allow organisations to protect not only virtual infrastructure, but also containerised and bare-metal workloads. Data Resilience by Design To further support enterprises, HPE and Veeam have launched a joint framework called "Data Resilience by Design". The framework is intended to empower customers to take a holistic, proactive stance towards securing and making their data highly available, through both technology and advisory services. As part of the initiative, the companies will provide HPE cybersecurity and cyber resilience transformation and readiness services, equipping organisations with a roadmap to assess, strengthen and future-proof data resilience strategies. The scope of the framework reflects concerns about the increasing sophistication of security threats facing businesses and the need for robust protections spanning private and hybrid cloud environments. The partnership aims to address these challenges by combining HPE's expertise across hybrid IT and cybersecurity with Veeam's capabilities in backup, recovery and data intelligence. The cooperation between HPE and Veeam also involves increased joint go-to-market investment, seeking to help customer organisations manage data protection with broader solution support and professional services. Unified approach to resilience With this extended partnership, both companies emphasise their focus on supporting organisations as they navigate heightened cyber risk and evolving IT demands. The aim is to enable customers to make use of private cloud environments while ensuring data remains secure, resilient and accessible. HPE and Veeam state that the combination of their technologies and expertise is designed to provide enterprises with the resources needed to manage increasingly complex operational and security landscapes.

PWHL plans further expansion — and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden its reach in Europe
PWHL plans further expansion — and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden its reach in Europe

Chicago Tribune

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Chicago Tribune

PWHL plans further expansion — and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden its reach in Europe

As impressive as the PWHL's growth has been less than two years since its launch, with the league blowing past initial attendance and revenue projections, and already into its first phase of expansion, Stan Kasten says you've seen nothing yet. The league's advisory board member laid out an ambitious vision of the PWHL's future during a phone interview with The Associated Press on Thursday. Kasten foresees further expansion — beyond the recent additions of Vancouver and Seattle to grow the PWHL to eight teams — within the next few years; the league capitalizing on the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympics to broaden its reach internationally; and the prospect of turning a profit by 2031, when the league's current CBA with its players expires. 'By every measure, we're ahead of where we thought we would be. And we never thought we were going to be this niche six-team league in the northeast of North America,' Kasten said. 'Our manifest destiny is a lot more than six. It's a lot more than eight. I don't know how many,' he added. 'My point is, we're going to be a league like every other real major league, and that's our goal. … We're going to be spread — our footprint will be across this continent and hopefully others as well.' Without making a firm commitment, Kasten said there was enough interest from major markets that missed out on expansion this year to add even more teams by 2026-27. He said the league will have a better timeline on the next expansion phase based on how smoothly Vancouver and Seattle are incorporated. 'I'll know by midseason what I think we should do and we'll go from there,' he said. 'I don't know if it's the year after or the year after that, but I think it'll be sooner than most people ever imagined.' What's clearer is the league turning its focus toward Europe to coincide with the Olympics, and a women's hockey tournament predominantly featuring PWHL talent. Kasten said there have been discussions about playing exhibition games in Europe within the next two years, as well as building ties with European leagues for developmental purposes and even of one day establishing teams there. 'Europe is a big part of our future,' Kasten said. 'I think our presence on the international stage next year is going to be really well-timed, a propitious step for us,' he added. 'We think the period before the Olympics, during the Olympics and after the Olympics are very important to the next stage of our development.' Kasten spoke from Ottawa where he attended Game 2 of the best-of-five Walter Cup Finals series, which is tied at 1 after defending champion Minnesota's 2-1 overtime win. The PWHL is closing its second season, which featured jumps in attendance, revenues, sponsorships and goal scoring — from 4.8 to 5.02 per outing — over the inaugural season. Average attendance rose from 5,448 per contest last year to 7,260 due in part to nine neutral site games drawing a combined 123,601 fans. Attendance in Toronto and Montreal jumped with both teams playing in larger venues, though Minnesota and Ottawa had slight drops in average turnout when not including their designated 'home' neutral site games. Turnout continues to lag in New York where the Sirens finished last in the standings for a second straight year while averaging a league-low 2,764 fans per game — up from 2,496 last year — at the NHL Devils home, the Prudential Center. Executive vice president of business operations Amy Scheer said the league's sponsorships increased from 40 to 60, and merchandise sales doubled — helped by the PWHL unveiling logos and nicknames for its six teams this season. Kasten doesn't discount needs the PWHL has to address, noting the league intends to increase promotions and improve venues in various markets. Another concern is how fanbases will respond to each of the six existing teams standing to lose four players each as part of the expansion process next month. For Kasten, that doesn't take away what the league has accomplished in 23 months since being launched by his boss, Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter and wife Kimbra, tennis icon Billie Jean King and Ilana Kloss. As the PWHL's financial backer, Walter committed hundreds of millions of dollars as part of a long-term vision to bring together the world's top women players in one league. Kasten said the initial projection for attendance was 1,000 per game for a league that in March surpassed the 1 million mark, including playoffs. 'I see us on a very distinct upward track able to look towards seasons where we can start to turn the corner and be in the black,' Kasten said, looking ahead to 2031. 'We're far away from that now and that's OK. We projected that,' he added. 'But when that happens, we can also think about expanding the schedule. And with an expanded schedule in an environment where you're finally making money, well, now there's more money for more people. 'And so I hope by then we're at that point. That would thrill me.'

PWHL plans further expansion, and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe
PWHL plans further expansion, and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe

Boston Globe

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Boston Globe

PWHL plans further expansion, and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe

'By every measure, we're ahead of where we thought we would be. And we never thought we were going to be this niche six-team league in the northeast of North America,' Kasten said. 'Our manifest destiny is a lot more than six. It's a lot more than eight. I don't know how many,' he added. 'My point is, we're going to be a league like every other real major league, and that's our goal. ... We're going to be spread — our footprint will be across this continent and hopefully others as well.' Advertisement Expansion plans Without making a firm commitment, Kasten said there was enough interest from major markets that missed out on expansion this year to add even more teams by 2026-27. He said the league will have a better timeline on the next expansion phase based on how smoothly Vancouver and Seattle are incorporated. Advertisement 'I'll know by midseason what I think we should do and we'll go from there,' he said. 'I don't know if it's the year after or the year after that, but I think it'll be sooner than most people ever imagined.' Eye on Europe What's clearer is the league turning its focus toward Europe to coincide with the Olympics, and a women's hockey tournament predominantly featuring PWHL talent. Kasten said there have been discussions about playing exhibition games in Europe within the next two years, as well as building ties with European leagues for developmental purposes and even of one day establishing teams there. 'Europe is a big part of our future,' Kasten said. 'I think our presence on the international stage next year is going to be really well-timed, a propitious step for us,' he added. 'We think the period before the Olympics, during the Olympics and after the Olympics are very important to the next stage of our development.' Kasten spoke from Ottawa where he attended Game 2 of the best-of-five Walter Cup Finals series, which is tied at 1 after defending champion Minnesota's 2-1 overtime win. Attendance jumps The PWHL is closing its second season, which featured jumps in attendance, revenues, sponsorships and goal scoring — from 4.8 to 5.02 per outing — over the inaugural season. Average attendance rose from 5,448 per contest last year to 7,260 due in part to nine neutral site games drawing a combined 123,601 fans. Attendance in Toronto and Montreal jumped with both teams playing in larger venues, though Minnesota and Ottawa had slight drops in average turnout when not including their designated 'home' neutral site games. Turnout continues to lag in New York where the Sirens finished last in the standings for a second straight year while averaging a league-low 2,764 fans per game — up from 2,496 last year — at the NHL Devils' home, the Prudential Center. Advertisement Executive vice president of business operations Amy Scheer said the league's sponsorships increased from 40 to 60, and merchandise sales doubled — helped by the PWHL unveiling logos and nicknames for its six teams this season. Kasten doesn't discount needs the PWHL has to address, noting the league intends to increase promotions and improve venues in various markets. Another concern is how fanbases will respond to each of the six existing teams standing to lose four players each as part of the expansion process next month. Hopeful future For Kasten, that doesn't take away what the league has accomplished in 23 months since being launched by his boss, Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter and wife Kimbra, tennis icon Billie Jean King, and Ilana Kloss. As the PWHL's financial backer, Walter committed hundreds of millions of dollars as part of a long-term vision to bring together the world's top women players in one league. Kasten said the initial projection for attendance was 1,000 per game for a league that in March surpassed the 1 million mark, including playoffs. 'I see us on a very distinct upward track able to look towards seasons where we can start to turn the corner and be in the black,' Kasten said, looking ahead to 2031. 'We're far away from that now and that's OK. We projected that,' he added. 'But when that happens, we can also think about expanding the schedule. And with an expanded schedule in an environment where you're finally making money, well, now there's more money for more people. Advertisement 'And so I hope by then we're at that point. That would thrill me.'

PWHL plans further expansion, eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe
PWHL plans further expansion, eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe

Toronto Sun

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Toronto Sun

PWHL plans further expansion, eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe

Published May 23, 2025 • 4 minute read FILE - Los Angeles Dodgers President and CEO Stan Kasten speaks during a news conference at Dodger Stadium, Jan. 15, 2021, in Los Angeles. Photo by Irfan Khan / AP As impressive as the PWHL's growth has been less than two years since its launch, with the league blowing past initial attendance and revenue projections, and already into its first phase of expansion, Stan Kasten says you've seen nothing yet. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The league's advisory board member laid out an ambitious vision of the PWHL's future during a phone interview with The Associated Press on Thursday. Kasten foresees further expansion — beyond the recent additions of Vancouver and Seattle to grow the PWHL to eight teams _ within the next few years; the league capitalizing on the 2026 Milan Winter Games to broaden its reach internationally; and the prospect of turning a profit by 2031, when the league's current CBA with its players expires. 'By every measure, we're ahead of where we thought we would be. And we never thought we were going to be this niche six-team league in the northeast of North America,' Kasten said. 'Our manifest destiny is a lot more than six. It's a lot more than eight. I don't know how many,' he added. 'My point is, we're going to be a league like every other real major league, and that's our goal. … We're going to be spread — our footprint will be across this continent and hopefully others as well.' Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Without making a firm commitment, Kasten said there was enough interest from major markets that missed out on expansion this year to add even more teams by 2026-27. He said the league will have a better timeline on the next expansion phase based on how smoothly Vancouver and Seattle are incorporated. 'I'll know by midseason what I think we should do and we'll go from there,' he said. 'I don't know if it's the year after or the year after that, but I think it'll be sooner than most people ever imagined.' Eye on Europe What's clearer is the league turning its focus toward Europe to coincide with the Olympics, and a women's hockey tournament predominantly featuring PWHL talent. Kasten said there have been discussions about playing exhibition games in Europe within the next two years, as well as building ties with European leagues for developmental purposes and even of one day establishing teams there. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'Europe is a big part of our future,' Kasten said. 'I think our presence on the international stage next year is going to be really well-timed, a propitious step for us,' he added. 'We think the period before the Olympics, during the Olympics and after the Olympics are very important to the next stage of our development.' Kasten spoke from Ottawa where he attended Game 2 of the best-of-five Walter Cup Finals series, which is tied at 1 after defending champion Minnesota's 2-1 overtime win. Attendance jumps The PWHL is closing its second season, which featured jumps in attendance, revenues, sponsorships and goal scoring — from 4.8 to 5.02 per outing — over the inaugural season. Average attendance rose from 5,448 per contest last year to 7,260 due in part to nine neutral site games drawing a combined 123,601 fans. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Attendance in Toronto and Montreal jumped with both teams playing in larger venues, though Minnesota and Ottawa had slight drops in average turnout when not including their designated 'home' neutral site games. Turnout continues to lag in New York where the Sirens finished last in the standings for a second straight year while averaging a league-low 2,764 fans per game — up from 2,496 last year _ at the NHL Devils home, the Prudential Center. Without providing exact figures, executive vice president of business operations Amy Scheer said the league's sponsorships grew by 50% and merchandise sales doubled — helped by the PWHL unveiling logos and nicknames for its six teams this season. Kasten doesn't discount needs the PWHL has to address, noting the league intends to increase promotions and improve venues in various markets. Another concern is how fanbases will respond to each of the six existing teams standing to lose four players each as part of the expansion process next month. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. For Kasten, that doesn't take away what the league has accomplished in 23 months since being launched by his boss, Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter and wife Kimbra, and tennis icon Billie Jean King. As the PWHL's financial backer, Walter committed hundreds of millions of dollars as part of a long-term vision to bring together the world's top women players in one league. Kasten said the initial projection for attendance was 1,000 per game for a league that in March surpassed the 1 million mark, including playoffs. 'I see us on a very distinct upward track able to look towards seasons where we can start to turn the corner and be in the black,' Kasten said, looking ahead to 2031. 'We're far away from that now and that's OK. We projected that,' he added. 'But when that happens, we can also think about expanding the schedule. And with an expanded schedule in an environment where you're finally making money, well, now there's more money for more people. 'And so I hope by then we're at that point. That would thrill me.' Canada Toronto Maple Leafs Sunshine Girls Toronto & GTA Sunshine Girls

PWHL plans further expansion, and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe, Kasten tells AP
PWHL plans further expansion, and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe, Kasten tells AP

Fox Sports

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Fox Sports

PWHL plans further expansion, and eyes 2026 Olympics to broaden reach in Europe, Kasten tells AP

Associated Press As impressive as the PWHL's growth has been less than two years since its launch, with the league blowing past initial attendance and revenue projections, and already into its first phase of expansion, Stan Kasten says you've seen nothing yet. The league's advisory board member laid out an ambitious vision of the PWHL's future during a phone interview with The Associated Press on Thursday. Kasten foresees further expansion — beyond the recent additions of Vancouver and Seattle to grow the PWHL to eight teams — within the next few years; the league capitalizing on the 2026 Milan Winter Games to broaden its reach internationally; and the prospect of turning a profit by 2031, when the league's current CBA with its players expires. 'By every measure, we're ahead of where we thought we would be. And we never thought we were going to be this niche six-team league in the northeast of North America,' Kasten said. 'Our manifest destiny is a lot more than six. It's a lot more than eight. I don't know how many," he added. "My point is, we're going to be a league like every other real major league, and that's our goal. ... We're going to be spread — our footprint will be across this continent and hopefully others as well.' Expansion plans Without making a firm commitment, Kasten said there was enough interest from major markets that missed out on expansion this year to add even more teams by 2026-27. He said the league will have a better timeline on the next expansion phase based on how smoothly Vancouver and Seattle are incorporated. 'I'll know by midseason what I think we should do and we'll go from there,' he said. 'I don't know if it's the year after or the year after that, but I think it'll be sooner than most people ever imagined.' Eye on Europe What's clearer is the league turning its focus toward Europe to coincide with the Olympics, and a women's hockey tournament predominantly featuring PWHL talent. Kasten said there have been discussions about playing exhibition games in Europe within the next two years, as well as building ties with European leagues for developmental purposes and even of one day establishing teams there. 'Europe is a big part of our future,' Kasten said. 'I think our presence on the international stage next year is going to be really well-timed, a propitious step for us,' he added. 'We think the period before the Olympics, during the Olympics and after the Olympics are very important to the next stage of our development.' Kasten spoke from Ottawa where he attended Game 2 of the best-of-five Walter Cup Finals series, which is tied at 1 after defending champion Minnesota's 2-1 overtime win. Attendance jumps The PWHL is closing its second season, which featured jumps in attendance, revenues, sponsorships and goal scoring — from 4.8 to 5.02 per outing — over the inaugural season. Average attendance rose from 5,448 per contest last year to 7,260 due in part to nine neutral site games drawing a combined 123,601 fans. Attendance in Toronto and Montreal jumped with both teams playing in larger venues, though Minnesota and Ottawa had slight drops in average turnout when not including their designated 'home' neutral site games. Turnout continues to lag in New York where the Sirens finished last in the standings for a second straight year while averaging a league-low 2,764 fans per game — up from 2,496 last year — at the NHL Devils home, the Prudential Center. Without providing exact figures, executive vice president of business operations Amy Scheer said the league's sponsorships grew by 50% and merchandise sales doubled — helped by the PWHL unveiling logos and nicknames for its six teams this season. Kasten doesn't discount needs the PWHL has to address, noting the league intends to increase promotions and improve venues in various markets. Another concern is how fanbases will respond to each of the six existing teams standing to lose four players each as part of the expansion process next month. Hopeful future For Kasten, that doesn't take away what the league has accomplished in 23 months since being launched by his boss, Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter and wife Kimbra, and tennis icon Billie Jean King. As the PWHL's financial backer, Walter committed hundreds of millions of dollars as part of a long-term vision to bring together the world's top women players in one league. Kasten said the initial projection for attendance was 1,000 per game for a league that in March surpassed the 1 million mark, including playoffs. 'I see us on a very distinct upward track able to look towards seasons where we can start to turn the corner and be in the black,' Kasten said, looking ahead to 2031. 'We're far away from that now and that's OK. We projected that,' he added. 'But when that happens, we can also think about expanding the schedule. And with an expanded schedule in an environment where you're finally making money, well, now there's more money for more people. 'And so I hope by then we're at that point. That would thrill me.' ___ AP Women's Hockey: in this topic

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