IBM christened the
integration of its Power4+ chip architecture across its Unix server line
Wednesday by releasing a new pSeries machine for the low-end of the market.
The move to the Power4+ from the Power3 architecture is IBM’s bid to offer
enhanced performance at a reasonable price, something rivals HP and Sun
Microsystems have been working toward.
The Armonk, N.Y. company said it has completed the integration of 64-bit
Power4+ across its Unix line after six months and unveiled the p615, an
entry-level machine IBM said is 110 percent more powerful than the pSeries
610, which uses Power3-II chips. Ideal for running such as enterprise
resource planning, supply chain management, customer relationship management
and business intelligence applications, the p615 effectively replaces the
p610, but IBM said it would still keep up its production in that departments
to serve existing customers.
The outfit has already released the high-end p690 and p670 and the midrange
p655, p650 and p630 machines with Power4+ technology.
IBM eServer Director Jim McGaughan said the feat of moving all of its Unix
servers to the more powerful architecture in six months is a source of pride
for IBM, but noted that what customers will really care for is the
value-adds at a low price point. These features include more than one
terabyte of internal disk storage so customers may run powerful applications
without having to buy storage devices. The p615 can also be managed remotely
using a wireless personal digital assistant or similar, Web-enabled wireless
gadgets.
“All of reliability features are a constant across the product line,”
McGaughan said. “A 2-way system can dynamically allocate a single processor.
There is failure capture, chipkill memory, standard redundant power
supplies and hotplug PCI slots, wich weren’t in the p610.”
McGaughan would not reveal actual customers but he provided examples of some
uses for the p615, which may be easily clustered with fellow p615s to add
more punch. He said the p615 is ideal for the back offices of motels and
hotels or retail stores, where customers can “throw it in a closet forget
about it,” because it can be remotely controlled.
IBM is positioning the Power4+ achievement against rivals, as McGaughan said
Sun and HP are still trying to shift focus to their Ultrasparc III and
Itanium 2 platforms, respectively.
“I don’t think any other vendor has migrated to new architecture at the same
rate as IBM,” McGaugahn said. “No one else has gone from soup to nuts —
from small to large servers — in six months.”
IBM offers p615 support for its Unix operating system, AIX 5L, and Linux.
The p615 is available now at a starting price of $5,745 for a one-way system
with one GB of memory. A two-way with 2GB will be ready June 20 and is
expected to retail for $9,995 for the AIX version, and $8,995 for the Linux
version.
For those for which the excitement of Power4+ architecture has cooled down,
McGaughan said they can look forward to the Power5+ architecture some time
next year. While he wouldn’t divulge exact features, he said the public
could expect “faster hardware, better functionality, greater granularity and
improvements in logical partitioning.”