HP: Trim the Fat with Efficeon Blades
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.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
A growing number of online companies are ambushing competitors through software that puts ads where marketers want them most--in front of customers visiting rival Web sites.
more »
Internet Explorer 6 is due to go gold next week and will be released on August 15 as a standalone program, according to software development sites.
more »
Another .NET enabled product has left the stables at Redmond.
more »
The worm has kept Josef Chamberlin busy at the keyboard, operating on only snippets of sleep, many recent days and nights.
more »
If you need to reach someone at his or her office, the phone--we now know--is not the best way to do it. E-mail is easier and more popular, as evidenced by the deluge of messages with which cube dwellers are greeted each morning as they log onto their com
more »
Over a third of European Internet users are ready to buy a car on the Internet, according to a new study.
more »
Sweden must maintain the pace of its UMTS network rollout
more »
While the Federal Bureau of Investigation and network security advocates are busy mobilizing IT managers around the country for the upcoming outbreak of the Code Red Worm, one resourceful Web site operator from the Utrecht in the Netherlands stands to mak
more »
The fast-spreading ``Code Red'' Internet worm, which disrupted U.S. government Web sites last week, is likely to start multiplying again on Tuesday and could slow down the Internet, officials said on Monday.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »