News

Compaq, IBM Roll Out New Server Hardware

Compaq Computer Corp. and IBM Corp. unveiled Intel-based server hardware this week.

Compaq introduced systems with memory protection features and a set of server appliances. IBM showed off a pair of entry-level servers based on Intel's Tualatin processor.

In launching two new ProLiant servers, Compaq announced a memory protection roadmap called the Advanced Memory Protection Architecture. The ProLiant DL380 and ProLiant ML370 will ship in July with the first implementation of the architecture, DIMM-level memory fail-over without downtime. Future servers will provide for hot-plug memory and RAID memory, Compaq says.

The DL380 is a 2-processor, 2U rack server. The ML370 is a 2-U tower server.

Compaq introduced two new appliance servers. The company expanded its TaskSmart C-series of content caching servers with the TaskSmart C4000, available in July starting at $7,199. The company also introduced a new W-series of TaskSmart servers for Web hosting with the TaskSmart W2200, starting at $1,799.

IBM's two new servers are part of its Project eLiza initiative for creating self-managing servers. The IBM eServer xSeries 232 and 342 feature Intel's Tualatin Pentium III 1.13 GHz processors. Both are 2-processor servers; the 342 is a 3U rack-mountable server.

IBM also made the Tualatin processor available in its 1U x330 server.

About the Author

Scott Bekker is editor in chief of Redmond Channel Partner magazine.

comments powered by Disqus
Most   Popular