Last time, we mentioned some of the values blade servers deliver – limited impact on floor space, device consolidation and centralized management. But the overwhelming majority of server blades are ...
Blade servers have become popular building blocks for enabling converged data centers. They offer the ability to reduce complexity while supporting higher resource densities in terms of compute ...
As companies seek to cast server blades as general-purpose servers, they are building out their server blade infrastructures in a similar fashion to traditional server-network-storage connections. HP ...
RLX latest offering is what the company calls a “modular computing” solution, containing blade servers and FC (Fibre Channel) storage arrays, plus an enhanced version of its Control Tower management ...
Blade servers have become popular building blocks for enabling converged data centers. They offer the ability to reduce complexity while supporting higher resource densities in terms of compute ...
The Sun Blade T6340, which is based on the UltraSPARC T2 Plus processor. The Sun Blade X6240, which is based on AMD’s quad-core Opteron 2300 processor. The Sun Blade 6000 storage blade, which offers ...
Hewlett-Packard is adding a storage module to its blade chassis, letting as much as 876GB of extra capacity be attached to a single blade server. The StorageWorks SB40c blade, available Nov. 14 for a ...
HP on Monday unveiled new storage and server hardware and software in a move it called the next phase in its infrastructure convergence technology plans. On the storage side, Hewlett-Packard unveiled ...
The new IBM Web Infrastructure Orchestration bundle consists of seven IBM server blades, a FAStT storage array, and licenses for DB2, WebSphere and Tivoli, all integrated together and managed by IBM ...
HP unveiled three new hardware products this week, all part of its Converged Infrastructure portfolio. They include a new blade enclosure, new networking for that enclosure and a new blade server.
Blade servers are modular, single-board computers, typically about 7 in. high, 2 in. wide and 19 in. deep. Each blade contains processors, memory, network controllers and other I/O ports; it plugs ...