Comments on: Can HP's 'Super' server save Itanium?
Intel's beleaguered processor could get boost when HP releases new top-end Superdome machine designed for it.
Intel's beleaguered processor could get boost when HP releases new top-end Superdome machine designed for it.
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Architecture speeds between chips and memory, Nor, and of
even more relevance, the underlying support for an OS which in
design should be tightly coupled with the machine code
instruction set to add any business value. Is HP going to
support HP/UX, and r LPAR's with all of this horse power under
the hood? Or, will HP continue to waffle between Microsoft,
Linux and HP/UX with no clear direction other than INTEL speeds
and feeds and impressive processor names? So what good are
64 of these bad boys running in a single box if I can not
provision all of this into a consolidated "adaptive" system for an
Enterprise?
On the ground here in the Silicon Valley, we see Opteron as the
chip of choice in the egineering community (Linux) as a whole.
This portends that AMD has the right stuff for the next wave of
killer business apps. It seems to me that when you are talkng
speeds and feeds, you have to include the versatility of the
underlying OS/architecture to have a meaningful discussion. So,
in short, what is the actual point of this Itanium architecture? Is
it relevant? Probably not.
Hardware based partitions (BTW, not available from IBM) are already supported (thus we have been Adaptive Enterprise capabilities for quite some time) and software based partitions will be soon supported on the Integrity servers.
I'm also based in Silicon Valley and see what goes on in running businesses here. HP warmly supports Opteron in our ProLiant servers (we ship more than anyone, including Sun and IBM) as well as Itanium in our Integrity servers. Each has different application sweet spots. ProLiant servers are tops in price/performance in 1-4p configs and used most frequently in edge of network computing, email/groupware infrastructure, EDA, and smaller line of business applications/databases. Integrity servers are best in raw performance for the most demanding line of business applications such as ERP, floating point HPC, highly scalable datawarehouses and databases. Between ProLiant and Integrity servers HP can cover any workload that customers have. They are a nice complement to each other.
- HEY HP....ITANIC IS OVER, MOVE ON!
- by fred dunn April 1, 2005 7:27 AM PST
- When are you going to stop wasting your resources? If you are waiting for Intel to tell you that it's just not working out, don't. Take a lesson from Intels past, they continue to push products even when they are not wanted or needed. Why? Becasuse they have not listened to their consumers and have research expenditures that need to be recovered. And who is going wind up paying for those expenditures, HP. Go ahead and stock your inventory with Itanic processors, at some point you can sell them on eBay as novelty items.
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(3 Comments)Fred Dunn