Now I know why venture capitalists walk the halls at the University of Washington—you never know who you might run into. My timing was impeccable yesterday as I sat down with Kai Li, the co-founder and chief scientist of Data Domain (NASDAQ: [[ticker:DDUP]]), the Santa Clara, CA-based data storage company that just got bought by EMC (NYSE: [[ticker:EMC]]) for $2.1 billion in cash.
Li, who is a computer science professor at Princeton University (he has been visiting the UW for the past year and has some strong Seattle connections), made time for me despite his busy schedule. The deal with EMC has been in the works since June 1, when the Hopkinton, MA-based data storage and management giant launched its bid to acquire Data Domain despite a pending acquisition attempt by rival NetApp (NASDAQ: [[ticker:NTAP]]) initiated in May. Many twists and turns ensued, culminating in yesterday’s announcement by NetApp that it had taken itself out of the running, clearing the way for EMC’s takeover, at a bid of $33.50 per share.
Data Domain’s story is a compelling one. Li co-founded the company in 2001, together with Brian Biles (currently vice president of product management) and Ben Zhu (former chief research officer), with the idea of developing advanced “deduplication” software to get rid of redundant data before it gets stored, thereby saving companies storage space, time, and money. Li served as chief technology officer and CEO in the early days of the company, but since 2002 has been a consulting chief scientist and director. Over the next few years, Data Domain gained traction in the data backup and disaster recovery market and went public in June 2007, raising more than $110 million in an IPO.
In a wide-ranging interview, Li (left) talked about Data Domain’s technical approach, its market strategy, a little bit about the EMC deal, and the broader future of data storage. Here is an edited account:
Xconomy: So how does the EMC acquisition affect you?
Kai Li: I don’t know yet. EMC has been the leader in storage systems in general. They’re bigger than other players in the storage market, comparing with NetApp, IBM, HP, Dell, and Sun (now part of Oracle). EMC is the premier storage vendor for data centers. We haven’t been communicating with EMC because of the definitive agreement with NetApp, so I haven’t talked to EMC yet.
X: How does the deal affect Data Domain’s operations?
KL: EMC has written a letter to Data Domain employees. They said they’ll keep Data Domain