New Blade Servers

Published: 2 May 2004 y., Sunday
With the summer time fast approaching, HP is suggesting its customers try to shed some excess IT weight and slip into something a bit more thinning. The Palo Alto, Calif.-based company Monday added a batch of new blade servers based on the Transmeta TM8000 or Efficeon processor. The update marks HP as the only vendor to offer x86 architectures from three different chip manufacturers: Intel and AMD and Transmeta. The new offerings are a part of HP's Consolidated Client Infrastructure (CCI) hardware and software pairings. Originally unveiled in December, the goal is to offer customers a cheaper alternative to racks of pizza box servers and instead use "virtualization" software and low-power hardware in concert. The HP Blade PC bc1000 features a 1.0 GHz Efficeon processor, 40-gigabyte ultra ATA/100 hard drive and up to 1,024 megabytes of double data rate SDRAM. The new blade is ready in North America for $820 per blade and should ship around the world later this year. HP is also offering a customized package made up of HP's new blade PCs, Compaq thin clients, and network storage complete with installation, training and a support contract starting at just under $1,399 per seat.
Šaltinis: internetnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

LINUXWORLD - True believers still see Linux on desktop

Linux evangelists are keeping the faith, even when it comes to the elusive Holy Grail of the open-source operating system: taking a significant chunk of the desktop market. more »

Does Official Taliban Site Exist?

Afghanistan's Taliban government, which declared the Internet unholy and banned its use for millions of Afghan citizens last June, maintained a website until shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks more »

Web Welcome From Korea

This big Korea tourism site is designed to be the first port of call for providing information to overseas visitors to Korea. more »

FTC opens antifraud Web site

In court and on the Internet, the FTC and several states are cracking down on the practice with a Web site and lawsuits to help consumers "ditch the pitch." more »

Pentagon Denies GPS to Taliban

The Pentagon said on Friday that it won't limit the accuracy of positioning information that's beamed to civilian global positioning system (GPS) receivers. more »

Microsoft Lobbies For Strict New Zealand Copyright Rules

Microsoft has asked the New Zealand government to implement strict regulations to protect online intellectual property more »

Nokia Unveils Roaming Solution Using GSM, WLANs

Nokia Communications and Finnish operator Sonera reported today that they conducted wireless LAN roaming using the GSM core network and roaming infrastructure. more »

Surprise: E-Biz is Doing Fine

On Wednesday morning, the mass media abounded with pseudo-apocalyptic horrors. Dozens are "exposed" to anthrax. more »

Intertainer, Microsoft launch online film, video service

The market for watching movies over the Internet is uncertain, so few people have the necessary high-speed connections. more »

Hacking for the Cause

Group Claims Bank Hack Attacks; Others Not So Sure more »