Lucas Mearian
Senior Reporter

AmeriVault, NTG merger produces a storage services provider

news
Apr 7, 20092 mins

The two Provider HealthNet-owned firms move to combine online backup, managed services

Backup provider AmeriVault Corp. and managed services provider Network Technology Group Inc. (NTG), both owned by Provider HealthNet Services Inc., Monday announced plans to join forces as Venyu Inc., which will offer data backup, disaster recovery, and managed datacenter services to small- to midsized businesses.

AmeriVault and NTG were both purchased over the last two years by Provider HealthNet Services (PHNS), a $167 million provider of managed IT services to hospitals. Venyu, based in Baton Rouge, becomes a wholly owned subsidiary of PHNS.

[ InfoWorld’s Ephraim Schwartz asks: Can IT solve the electronic health records challenge? | Also, experts say e-health records are not enough ]

Venyu’s service uses EVault and Asigra online backup and disaster recovery software from Seagate Technology LLC’s i365 subsidiary and Backup Technology Ltd., respectively.

Executives said that the new company offers backup for both physical and virtualized server infrastructures, as well as managed hosting services for up to 60TB of data for each subscriber. All data is kept on disk subsystems from EMC Corp. or NetApp Inc.

“We’re focused on virtual disaster recovery,” said Scott Thompson, CEO of Venyu. “If you have five servers, we will take a snapshot of the data residing on them and keep a virtual instance of them in our own facility.”

Pricing starts at around $250 for 50GB of storage and the backup of one server, Thompson said.

The company offers a online price quote engine.

“A growing number of organizations face backup and recovery redesign but lack the facilities and resources to execute on it,” said Jerome Wendt, an analyst at DCIG Inc. “The launch of Venyu provides organizations with a solution for their immediate backup needs while enabling them to address their more strategic disaster recovery and availability objectives.”

Lucas Mearian

With a career spanning more than two decades in journalism and technology research, Lucas Mearian is a seasoned writer, editor, and former IDC analyst with deep expertise in enterprise IT, infrastructure systems, and emerging technologies. Currently a senior writer at Computerworld covering AI, the future of work, healthcare IT and financial services IT, his 23-year tenure has included roles such as Senior Technology Editor and Data Storage Channel Editor, where he covered cutting-edge topics like blockchain, 3D printing, sustainable IT, and autonomous vehicles. He has appeared on several podcasts, including Foundry’s Today In Tech. He also served as a research manager at IDC, where he focused on software-defined infrastructure, compute, and storage within the Infrastructure Systems, Platforms, and Technologies group.

Before entering tech media, he served as Editor-in-Chief of the Waltham Daily News Tribune and as a senior reporter for the MetroWest Daily News. He’s won first place awards from the New England Press Association, the American Association of Business Publication Editors, and has been a finalist for several Jesse H. Neal Awards for outstanding business journalism. A former U.S. Marine Corps sergeant who served in reconnaissance, he brings a disciplined, analytical mindset to his work, along with outstanding writing, research, and public speaking skills.

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