April 5, 2010
by Merv Adrian
by Joe Clabby, President, Clabby Analytics. Updated from a November 2009 publication
There is a major shakeout underway in the midrange/high-end server marketplace as sales of Sun SPARC/CMT (cellular multi-threading) and Hewlett-Packard (HP) Itanium-based servers decline significantly — and as new, more powerful versions of Intel’s Xeon and IBM’s POWER micro-architectures come to market. Read more of this post
37.696935
-121.867562
Filed under Hardware platforms, Middleware, Software infrastructure
Tagged with 64-bit, AIX, AMD, backplane, blade, blade server, Clabby, core, CRM, DDR3, Dell, DLPAR, EAL, encryption, EPIC, ERP, FB-DIMM, GAAP, hardware, high availability, HP, HP-UX, hyper-threading, hypervisor, I/O, IBM, Intel, IT, Itanium, Linux, LPAR, mainframe, memory management, MTBF, multicore, Nehalem, NonStop, OpenVMS, Oracle, PA-RISC, Parallel Sysplex, partitioning, Power7, RAS, RISC, SCM, SDRAM, security, server, SGI, SMP, SPARC, Sun, System z, Systems Director, Tivoli, Unix, virtualization, Windows, WPAR, XEON
Recent Comments – Keep ‘Em Coming!