

Systinet products are now called HP SOA Systinet software.įrom 4 January 2006 until its acquisition by Hewlett-Packard, Mercury Interactive was traded via the Pink Sheets as a result of being delisted from the NASDAQ due to noncompliance with filing requirements. Mercury Interactive acquired Systinet in 2006 for $105M.
#Winrunner dll software#
Systinet (formerly named IdooX) was a software vendor of registry and enablement products for standard service-oriented architecture ( SOA).BeatBox was incorporated into Mercury's Real User Monitor (RUM) product, which is now part of HP Business Availability Center. Mercury Interactive acquired BeatBox in 2005 for approximately $14 million in cash, "to extend the real user monitoring capabilities of its BTO software and to enhance its performance lifecycle offerings.". BeatBox Technologies (formerly named "ClickCadence LLC") was a software vendor of real user behavior tracking products.Appilog products are now part of HP Universal CMDB software, an HP Business Service Management offering. Mercury Interactive acquired Appilog for $49M in 2004. Appilog products mapped the relationships among applications and their underlying infrastructure. Appilog was a software vendor of auto-discovery and application mapping software.Kintana products are now called HP Project and Portfolio Management software. Mercury Interactive acquired Kintana in June 2003 for $225M. was a software vendor of IT governance products. Mercury Interactive acquired Performant in 2003 for $22.5M. was a software vendor of J2EE diagnostic tools. The product is now called HP SiteScope software. Mercury Interactive acquired Freshwater Software in 2001. Freshwater Software was a software vendor of a web server monitoring and administration tool called SiteScope.As part of Mercury, Conduct alumni started a new project, nicknamed Falcon and later called Prism, that switched focus to monitoring web server traffic. Its main product was SiteRunner, which used multi-agent technology to pinpoint bottlenecks. The company provided network topology visualization products, to pinpoint bottlenecks and isolate the location of network problems both across the network and across the system infrastructure. Conduct Software Technologies, Inc., acquired by Mercury Interactive in a share-swap deal worth about $50M, was a privately held software company founded in 1996 by Sharon Azulai, David Barzilai, and Ran Levy.In September 2017, HPE completed the sale of most of its software assets, including the legacy Mercury Interactive products to UK-based Micro Focus.įrom 2000 until its HP acquisition in 2006, Mercury purchased several software companies: Most of the Mercury Interactive software assets were apportioned to Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) when HP split into two companies. Mercury Interactive legacy products were integrated and sold as part of the HP IT Management Software portfolio from the HP Software Division. The Mercury Interactive products are now sold by HP Software Division.

On 7 November 2006, Mercury Interactive formally became part of HP.

On 25 July 2006, Hewlett-Packard announced it would pay approximately $4.5 billion to acquire Mercury Interactive. It also had a large R&D facility in Yehud, Israel. The company was based in California and had offices located around the world. In 1989, Zvi Schpizer, Ilan Kinriech and Arye Finegold founded Mercury Interactive Corporation.
