Enterprise

Why Akamai bought Linode

Comment

New Akamai Headquarters In Kendall Square
Image Credits: Suzanne Kreiter/The Boston Globe via Getty Images / Getty Images

Earlier this year, Akamai announced its plans to acquire Linode, the well-loved cloud hosting service, to build out its own cloud and edge computing portfolio. The $900 million acquisition closed last month. While Akamai is still mostly known for its content delivery services, the company started building out more compute-centric services over the course of the last few years, in part because of requests from existing customers. Apple, for example, is using Akamai for its Private Relay service. Now, with Linode, the company plans to quickly build out this portfolio — and in the course of this, transform Akamai into a bit of a different company, too.

To talk about what the acquisition means for the future of Akamai, I sat down with Adam Karon, the company’s COO and GM of its Edge Technology Group.

Karon said he basically spent his entire career at Akamai, which he joined back in 2005, to get this done. Back then, Akamai offered a service called Edge Java that allowed developers to deploy application servers at the edge of the company’s network. In many ways, though, the market wasn’t ready for this service yet.

“This is before AWS,” Karon explained. “Akamai was too early to market back then and we didn’t continue the product. But it was very depressing for me as a developer to not continue that. So then finally, to be able to lead this acquisition through the end of last year into this year, it was really exciting to see it come to fruition — to really have a full-fledged computing platform we can build on now.”

He also noted that Akamai had been getting more and more requests from its existing customers to offer more edge computing services, with Apple leading the charge here for its Private Relay. “A year and a half ago, Apple[…] came and they said: ‘you know, we’re going to need to do delivery as part of this proxy service, but we do need a compute component for this as well. And, you know, what about us using your edge for running our VMs or containers,’” Karon said. Akamai already had an internal platform that would allow it to do this and so the team decided to offer that to Apple as well. Unsurprisingly, that led to other customers also wanting similar capabilities.

“It was really our customers, starting with Apple, pushing us in this direction. We wanted to play in this space but we just weren’t sure whether or not our customers would think of us here,” Karon explained. “But we always felt like we had a right to be in this space. We always sat between compute and the end user and we did do some compute on our edge. We had our application serverless [platform], whether it was with JavaScript or our own metadata language — we were doing business logic but we couldn’t really do like full-fledged compute.”

To build out those capabilities, Akamai could have built out its own compute service, but the team decided that it wanted to move quickly to capitalize on this opportunity. Akamai’s existing service currently runs in 100 locations, but the idea is to collapose both platforms into one so that at the end, it’s just Linode.

But beyond that, Karon noted that it’s not just about moving fast but also transforming Akamai’s focus on enterprise customers to become more developer centric. I barely have a conversation with an enterprise company today where somebody doesn’t talk about how developers are increasingly the decision makers, so it makes sense for Akamai to also delve deeper into this space. Today, developers set up a server on Linode with their credit card, but that’s obviously not the way Akamai has sold its business over the years.

“We want to give that experience for not just our new compute — we want that experience for all of our products. And we’ve been moving in that direction, but we’re not where Linode is today for our enterprise product,” Karon explained.

For Linode itself, nothing is changing right now. The name stays, Karon said, and the prices remain the same. But Akamai is also investing heavily in helping the Linode team build out its service, expand into new data centers and build out its feature set, with a new database-as-a-service offering launching soon, for example, likely followed by an expansion of its managed container service with more enterprise features. Karon also mentioned additional virtual private cloud features for Linode that are in the pipeline.

Karon also noted that on the other side, Akamai will likely want to be able to offer non-enterprise customers on Linode the ability to buy CDN capabilities. It already built some of these capabilities when it launched its click-to-buy CDN solution for Azure a few years ago. The plan here is to launch that by the end of this year. Akamai also plans to bring its security expertise to Linode by adding a basic web application protector (WAP) to the service.

With 250 employees, Linode is obviously the smaller company here. Akamai has 10,000 employees. The overall idea here, though, is to keep Linode’s culture intact in the process of merging the two businesses. “In many other acquisitions, the way we do integration is you take existing teams, you move them to their peer team, and you break apart the old company and you move it into the right locations. And that creates a cultural disaster in many cases, right? It really says, ‘I don’t care about the culture I just bought.’ In this case, we did it reverse,” he explained. “We’re going to inject Akamai into Linode, as opposed to putting Linode inside Akamai.” He also noted that at the engineering level, the two companies’ cultures are already very much the same anyway. Karon described walking into Linode like walking into Akamai a decade ago.

“The cultures are really good matches,” Karon added. “They’re not as different as you would think but the priorities that they choose are different. They’re choosing the developer over the enterprise and the world is shifting to where the enterprise is becoming the developer. And we see that so we want to shift to the developer as our primary customer without losing our enterprise focus.”

The one thing Akamai doesn’t want to build, though, is another AWS. That’s something Karon was quite adamant about. “You should hang up on me right now if I said that,” he told me. The big clouds are partners for Akamai and just like they offer their own CDN services at times, Akamai thinks it can also build a compute service and still be a good partner to them as well. “We want to build out a core set of features to offer our customers diversity when they need it, edge capability when they need it and work in synergy. So we’re not going out there attempting to build another AWS,” he said.

Akamai acquires Linode for $900M

More TechCrunch

Looking Glass makes trippy-looking mixed-reality screens that make things look 3D without the need of special glasses. Today, it launches a pair of new displays, including a 16-inch mode that…

Looking Glass launches new 3D displays

Replacing Sutskever is Jakub Pachocki, OpenAI’s director of research.

Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI co-founder and longtime chief scientist, departs

Intuitive Machines made history when it became the first private company to land a spacecraft on the moon, so it makes sense to adapt that tech for Mars.

Intuitive Machines wants to help NASA return samples from Mars

As Google revamps itself for the AI era, offering AI overviews within its search results, the company is introducing a new way to filter for just text-based links. With the…

Google adds ‘Web’ search filter for showing old-school text links as AI rolls out

Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket will take a crew to suborbital space for the first time in nearly two years later this month, the company announced on Tuesday.  The NS-25…

Blue Origin to resume crewed New Shepard launches on May 19

This will enable developers to use the on-device model to power their own AI features.

Google is building its Gemini Nano AI model into Chrome on the desktop

It ran 110 minutes, but Google managed to reference AI a whopping 121 times during Google I/O 2024 (by its own count). CEO Sundar Pichai referenced the figure to wrap…

Google mentioned ‘AI’ 120+ times during its I/O keynote

Firebase Genkit is an open source framework that enables developers to quickly build AI into new and existing applications.

Google launches Firebase Genkit, a new open source framework for building AI-powered apps

In the coming months, Google says it will open up the Gemini Nano model to more developers.

Patreon and Grammarly are already experimenting with Gemini Nano, says Google

As part of the update, Reddit also launched a dedicated AMA tab within the web post composer.

Reddit introduces new tools for ‘Ask Me Anything,’ its Q&A feature

Here are quick hits of the biggest news from the keynote as they are announced.

Google I/O 2024: Here’s everything Google just announced

LearnLM is already powering features across Google products, including in YouTube, Google’s Gemini apps, Google Search and Google Classroom.

LearnLM is Google’s new family of AI models for education

The official launch comes almost a year after YouTube began experimenting with AI-generated quizzes on its mobile app. 

Google is bringing AI-generated quizzes to academic videos on YouTube

Around 550 employees across autonomous vehicle company Motional have been laid off, according to information taken from WARN notice filings and sources at the company.  Earlier this week, TechCrunch reported…

Motional cut about 550 employees, around 40%, in recent restructuring, sources say

The keynote kicks off at 10 a.m. PT on Tuesday and will offer glimpses into the latest versions of Android, Wear OS and Android TV.

Google I/O 2024: Watch all of the AI, Android reveals

Google Play has a new discovery feature for apps, new ways to acquire users, updates to Play Points, and other enhancements to developer-facing tools.

Google Play preps a new full-screen app discovery feature and adds more developer tools

Soon, Android users will be able to drag and drop AI-generated images directly into their Gmail, Google Messages and other apps.

Gemini on Android becomes more capable and works with Gmail, Messages, YouTube and more

Veo can capture different visual and cinematic styles, including shots of landscapes and timelapses, and make edits and adjustments to already-generated footage.

Google Veo, a serious swing at AI-generated video, debuts at Google I/O 2024

In addition to the body of the emails themselves, the feature will also be able to analyze attachments, like PDFs.

Gemini comes to Gmail to summarize, draft emails, and more

The summaries are created based on Gemini’s analysis of insights from Google Maps’ community of more than 300 million contributors.

Google is bringing Gemini capabilities to Google Maps Platform

Google says that over 100,000 developers already tried the service.

Project IDX, Google’s next-gen IDE, is now in open beta

The system effectively listens for “conversation patterns commonly associated with scams” in-real time. 

Google will use Gemini to detect scams during calls

The standard Gemma models were only available in 2 billion and 7 billion parameter versions, making this quite a step up.

Google announces Gemma 2, a 27B-parameter version of its open model, launching in June

This is a great example of a company using generative AI to open its software to more users.

Google TalkBack will use Gemini to describe images for blind people

Google’s Circle to Search feature will now be able to solve more complex problems across psychics and math word problems. 

Circle to Search is now a better homework helper

People can now search using a video they upload combined with a text query to get an AI overview of the answers they need.

Google experiments with using video to search, thanks to Gemini AI

A search results page based on generative AI as its ranking mechanism will have wide-reaching consequences for online publishers.

Google will soon start using GenAI to organize some search results pages

Google has built a custom Gemini model for search to combine real-time information, Google’s ranking, long context and multimodal features.

Google is adding more AI to its search results

At its Google I/O developer conference, Google on Tuesday announced the next generation of its Tensor Processing Units (TPU) AI chips.

Google’s next-gen TPUs promise a 4.7x performance boost

Google is upgrading Gemini, its AI-powered chatbot, with features aimed at making the experience more ambient and contextually useful.

Google’s Gemini updates: How Project Astra is powering some of I/O’s big reveals