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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Night Writer who wrote (93982)12/6/2001 3:45:12 PM
From: Night Writer  Respond to of 97611
 
Compaq Offers A Peek at Server Blade Apps

Dec 05, 2001 (Internet.com via COMTEX) -- Using the phrase "adaptive
infrastructure" to classify new software that promises to cope with the
increasing neediness of enterprises, Compaq Computer Corp. offered the world a
glimpse of new applications from its ProLiant line.

The software package, called ProLiant Essentials, is free, and was designed to
correspond with the company's ProLiant ML and DL blade server lines. It will
also be featured in the BL series (code-named "QuickBlade"), due to arrive on
the scene in early 2002. Basically, every ProLiant server will be delivered with
a ProLiant Essentials Foundation Pack, which will include Compaq Insight Manager
and SmartStart.

Designed to be cooler, and by extension save energy costs, blade servers are
thin circuit boards that typically house just a few microprocessors with memory.
Able to be stacked a few hundred boards vertically in a rack, they are meant to
power a single, dedicated application. Though Compaq previewed QuickBlade in
May, Hewlett-Packard Co. caused the industry to sit up and take notice yesterday
when it launched its blade server line. Should the proposed HewPaq merger go
through, it's conceivable that the combined firms will be strong in this arena,
where RLX Technologies Inc., Nexcom and various other hardware vendors compete.

The ProLiant BL Line was created for, here's that buzzword again, "adaptive"
computing, by which Compaq means the blade servers act as "virtual data centers
that are flexible, pervasive, cost-effective and universally manageable." To do
this, BL incorporates the servers, an intelligent rack infrastructure, and
management software. Specifically, BL will bundle dense, low-power, blade
servers with high-performance 2- and 4-processor blades for more rigorous
enterprise applications.

With the Essentials Software Pack, BL servers will offer coveted capabilities
such as rip-and-replace servers with automated personality migration for
multiple server deployment and dynamic scale-out. All of this means IT
administrators can respond to changing requirements more quickly and with less
fuss.

Mary McDowell, senior vice president and general manager, Compaq Industry
Standard Server Group, explained the reason for her firm's efforts:
"Organizations are faced with economic pressures, complex integration issues,
scarce resources, and fluctuating demand. Compaq is investing in technologies
for adaptive infrastructure that enable customers to maximize their existing IT
investments while adapting easily to the changes necessary to remain
competitive."

One market research firm analyst approved of Compaq's endeavor. Vernon Turner,
vice president of Global Enterprise Server Solutions at IDC, said the products
show that Compaq is aware of the need for dynamic applications in the face of
swift change.

"Compaq's vision for an adaptive infrastructure offers protection for customers'
existing investments, innovates around standards to drive new value into the
industry, and provides a pathway to a computing model that will benefit
companies around the world for years to come," Turner said.


By Clint Boulton
URL: internet.com