Level 3 Communications, Inc. will pay US$135 million to acquire the content delivery network (CDN) division of Savvis, improving its ability to deliver rich media such as web-based videos over its Internet backbone, the companies said Tuesday.Level 3 sells space on its global fiber optic network to customers like cable and Internet service providers who host Internet Protocol (IP) services, colocation, voice traffic, voice over IP (VoIP) and broadband Internet connections.Buying Savvis’ CDN business will allow Level 3 to host rich media such as video, Web 2.0 applications, multiplayer online gaming and software as a service, company president and chief operating officer Kevin O’Hara said in a news release. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe “Level 3 already has a strong brand and capabilities in video distribution through its Vyvx business. With native CDN capabilities and with Level 3’s highly scalable, industry-leading IP backbone, we believe that Level 3 will be able to bring additional value to all video-centric companies by delivering video in a more intelligent and comprehensive way to a broader range of destinations,” he said. Level 3 also hopes to become the only network provider to offer a full portfolio of CDN, IP transit, wavelengths, metro transport and colocation. The company will gain network elements, customer contracts and intellectual property from Savvis. Level 3 expects the deal to close in the first quarter of 2007, pending government approval.Savvis’ CDN group was founded in 1996 as Sandpiper Networks. Today, the division’s 50 employees are based in Thousand Oaks, Calif., where they design services that improve the reliability and scalability of online content for customers such as Microsoft. This is the third purchase in recent months by Level 3, which bought voice and data provider Broadwing Corp. for $1.4 billion in October, and Internet access provider TelCove Inc. for $1.2 billion in May.Savvis will use the sale to finance a $200 million move to increase its managed hosting and colocation services. The company announced plans on Tuesday to develop four new data centers in Atlanta, New York, Washington, DC and Santa Clara, California by the fourth quarter of 2007. — Ben Ames, IDG News Service (Boston Bureau)Related Links:• Essential Technology: Video Bellyaches• Building New Infrastructure: The Vision ThingCheck out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content opinion Four questions for a casino InfoSec director By Beth Kormanik Sep 21, 2023 3 mins Media and Entertainment Industry Events Security brandpost Four Leadership Motions make leading transformative work easier The Four Leadership Motions can be extremely beneficial —they don’t just drive results among software developers, they help people make extraordinary progress wherever they lead. By Jason Fraser, Director, Product Management & Design, VMware Tanzu Labs, Public Sector Sep 21, 2023 5 mins IT Leadership feature The year’s top 10 enterprise AI trends — so far In 2022, the big AI story was the technology emerging from research labs and proofs-of-concept, to it being deployed throughout enterprises to get business value. This year started out about the same, with slightly better ML algorithms and improved d By Maria Korolov Sep 21, 2023 16 mins Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence opinion 6 deadly sins of enterprise architecture EA is a complex endeavor made all the more challenging by the mistakes we enterprise architects can’t help but keep making — all in an honest effort to keep the enterprise humming. By Peter Wayner Sep 21, 2023 9 mins Enterprise Architecture IT Strategy Software Development Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe