Sun Unveils 64-bit Server Line
SumDog is one of many to let us know, PC World is reporting that Sun is expected to reveal the first few of their new 64-bit servers at their quarterly product rollout. From the article: "Formerly code-named Galaxy, the Sun Fire X2100, X4100, and X4200 servers represent the company's bid to woo customers, particularly the financial industry sector, away from rival server vendors Hewlett-Packard and Dell."
The UltraSPARC chips have been 64 bit for quite a while now. A more useful article summary would have pointed out the actual newsworthy bit of this story, which is that they're rolling out 64 bit x86 servers (running AMD Opterons).
Where bold insert Customer
That's simialr to Digital's downfall. They built some of the best computers in the world, thinking if we build it they will come. But it wasn't what the customers wanted. The same goes for catering to Wall Street. They want short term quick earnings growth; not necessarily long term custoemr growth. That may not be be conducive to achieving a product line that will last and the customers will even want.
Evil people don't think they're evil. - George Lucas, Making of Ep III
Well, say you are a large corporation that only buys from Tier 1 manufactures. Sure joe schmo can go get one from random white box corporation, but in the corporate world they stick to specific suppliers that they have contracts and provide 24/7 support.
Sun has had x86 servers for a while. It has had no effect on their SPARC sales, nor will it in the future. People who buy Sun will continue to purchace their SPARC servers until they discontinue making them. I'd be willing to say with the SPARC IV's coming out soon, that Sun is in no hurry to switch off their home platform.
Clinton made me a Republican. Bush made me a Libertarian. Trump is making me question reality.
This must be some miracle machine. From the linked article..
The two hard drives can be setup for RAID 0, 1 or 10 via the BIOS.
Now, it may be a few years since I took classes in college that touched on various RAID levels, but one thing that I DO remember is that RAID 10 requires a minimum of 4 physical drives...
The last project named Galaxy (at least the last one I remember), was when Sun decided to support multiprocessing in the early 90's. Asymetrical multiprocessing that it. There was a joke runniing around at the time thet went comething like:
"How do you make your Sun server run at 1/4 speed?"
"Add 3 more processors"
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
Disclaimer: I run mostly Linux at home, alongside a couple of OpenBSD machines. At work, Linux and Solaris x86. IMHO what Sun should do is stop treating Gnu software like orphans and make all the Gnu tools -- not just gcc -- easy to install, preferably installed by default.
Unlimited growth == Cancer.
As far as I know, there is not a single "Sun Fire" system ever made that didn't use bone-standard SCSI disks manufactured by IBM, Seagate, Fujitsu, or Hitatchi, etc (with 'proprietary' drive rails). That being said, the Sun-branded disks on their website are ridiculously overpriced, but there has never been anything technological to stop you from using whatever disks you please.
/. folks from crying "proprietary!" every time Sun is mentioned in the news.
I really hate this "proprietary" phrase getting thrown around with regard to Sun. Forget that they're using AMD CPUs now (the whole point of TFA), and please go ahead and tell me how SPARC is proprietary and Intel isn't. I'd love to hear this. Not to mention that Sun has probably done more for open standards and protocols over the years than any other single company that comes readily to mind. Open source is not necessary for open standards, which really, is what matters far more to me. But, even so, Solaris is now open source as well. But please don't let over 20 years of history and assorted facts stop