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March 14, 2003 04:50 PM GMT-5 EST, Eastern
US
Small Computing Blades
Make Big Impact; Participation Doubles at Annual Server Blade
Summit
SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 14, 2003--Interest in
the emerging blade computing market more than doubled since last
year, according to attendee and exhibitor participation in Server
Blade Summit 2003 (www.serverbladesummit.com),
the only worldwide conference and exhibition dedicated to the
rapidly emerging server blade technology segment.
Blades are computing devices packaged on small, ultra-dense cards
that pack up to eight times more servers and require 80 percent less
power than conventional 1U servers. Using an emerging generation of
management software, flexible blade configurations consisting of
multiple computing, storage and network elements can be
consolidated, shared and expanded as needed.
The blade computing market is one of the few bright spots in
today's information technology business. Industry analyst IDC
remains bullish about the blade market, reaffirming its forecast for
server blades to generate $3.7 billion in revenue by 2006.
Server Blade Summit 2003 attracted more than 700 attendees and 27
exhibitors, including HP, IBM, Sun, F5 Networks and ServerWorks.
Representatives from more than 30 companies, including new members
Network Appliance and Novadigm, attended the inaugural meeting of
the Server Blade Trade Association (www.serverbladeta.org),
which will focus on software interoperability and best practices for
the blade industry and establish councils for end users and industry
analysts.
More than 85 industry executives, including representatives from
HP, QLogic, Broadcom, IBM, Cisco Systems, Intel, Adaptec,
StorageTek, Unisys, Sun, AMD, and Network Appliance, spoke to packed
conference rooms on topics including server blade management,
standards, storage, backplane interconnects, security and
networking.
"Server blades are a segment buster that will become a key part
of the IT infrastructure," predicted keynote speaker Tom Bradicich,
Chief Technology Officer for IBM's xSeries Intel server group.
"Blades offer seven key benefits, including 10x increases in
density; node amortization for reduced costs of scalability; savings
in electrical power; simpler setup and configuration; infrastructure
integration for convergence of physical, operational and
administrative functions; better reliability, availability and
serviceability; and flexibility for easy introduction of new and
alternative technologies."
Management software for server blades is rampant with innovation.
At Server Blade Summit companies including Amphus, BladeLogic,
Corosoft, Marimba, Opsware, and Think Dynamics presented their
software for virtualizing or pooling blade computing installations.
John Abbott, Senior Analyst for the451, predicted that software
vendors are likely candidates for acquisition, following the recent
acquisition of Terraspring by Sun and Jareva Technologies by
VERITAS.
Several vendors introduced blade-related offerings. HP, which has
been the most successful blade server vendor to date with more than
19,000 units shipped according to IDC, unveiled several new members
of the HP Blade Server Alliance Program for HP ProLiant blade
servers, including Citrix Systems, Ensim, Jareva, Red Hat, SuSE and
Think Dynamics. Voltaire introduced its line of InfiniBand switch
routers and host channel adapters. CoroSoft released its data center
automation solution for Sun Solaris. Tatung Science &
Technology, Amphus, and MessageSoft demonstrated a blade server
appliance for secure E-mail.
"Volume-driven economics brought about by low-cost,
industry-standard servers and the rapid adoption of Linux and
clustering technologies are key to the explosive adoption of blade
servers," said Anil Vasudeva, President and CEO of IMEX Research, a
San Jose-based technology markets research and consulting company.
"The market for computing blades, although nascent at this stage, is
poised to explode from less than one percent in 2002 to 23 percent
in 2006 of all entry and small server shipments. The success of
blades is being driven by the academic, laboratory and commercial
visualization community in the high-performance technical and
numerical-intensive segments of the market."
About Server Blades
Server blades are a new generation of highly advanced,
ultra-dense server environments. A server blade is essentially an
entire server that fits on a single card, or blade, and contains the
CPU, memory, and networking components necessary to run
applications. These blades are plugged into a single chassis that
can accommodate upwards of 24 server blades in the space previously
occupied by one traditional server. When comparing a standard 6'
data center rack, administrators could deploy 336 server blades,
versus 42 1U servers. In addition to delivering an ultra-dense
server environment, server blades offer extremely low power
consumption, breakthrough "economies of scale" and a new level of
"economies of skill" through its plug-and-play design.
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