NETWORK WORLD NEWSLETTER: DENI CONNOR ON SERVERS
10/06/05
Today's focus: HP, Intel set up Itanium Solutions Alliance
Dear networking.world@gmail.com,
In this issue:
* HP, Intel alliance aims to promote Itanium apps development
* Links related to Servers
* Featured reader resource
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Sybase
It sounds so simple: if you collect enough business information,
you'll glean valuable insights that can drive both revenue
growth and competitive advantage. Along the way, however,
companies are discovering that managing the explosive growth of
online data can prove a formidable challenge. Here's how to
assess your data management style, and maximize your
opportunities to turn online data into business opportunity.
Click here for more on taming the data explosion.
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=116804
_______________________________________________________________
HOW WILL YOU HANDLE YOUR GROWING NETWORK LOAD?
InfiniBand, EtherFabric and iWarp are all high-speed
interconnect technologies aimed at offloading network
connections from server CPUs. And the buzz on them is picking up
as users look for alternatives to 10G Ethernet to handle their
growing network loads. What questions should you ask about these
new technologies? For more, click here:
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=116074
_______________________________________________________________
Today's focus: HP, Intel set up Itanium Solutions Alliance
By Deni Connor
Intel and HP last week announced the formation of the Itanium
Solutions Alliance, aimed at accelerating the development of
applications running on Itanium-based servers.
The software vendors that have joined are BEA, Sybase, Oracle,
Microsoft, Novell, Symantec, SAS, Trend Micro and Informatica.
However, a number of business-critical application vendors are
missing from that list, including SAP and IBM's software
business, which develops the DB2 and Informix databases.
Hardware vendors that have joined and have committed to building
Itanium servers include Fujitsu Siemens, Bull, Unisys, Hitachi
and SGI. Conspicuous by its absence from the alliance is Dell,
which earlier last month said it would abandon the Itanium
processor <http://www.networkworld.com/nlservers7933> . Dell
first introduced its Itanium-based PowerEdge 7150 server in
2001, which it still supports. That server was followed by the
PowerEdge 3250, which it now sells at its Factory Outlet site.
Also absent from the list of hardware manufacturers as members
is IBM, which relies on Intel Xeon processors and its own Power
architecture. Sun also didn't join the party - it relies heavily
on its own UltraSparc processor and on AMD's Opteron processor.
HP and Intel will provide alliance members with access to
technical resources, training and marketing. The alliance claims
there are 75-plus vendors shipping Itanium today and more than
10 operating systems supporting it. Among the operating system
support is Microsoft Windows
<http://www.networkworld.com/weblogs/nos/009913.html?rl>, Bull
GCOS, Novell's SuSE Enterprise Linux, Red Hat, HP-UX, OpenVMS,
Non Stop Kernel and NEC's operating system.
The alliance claims too that more than 5,000 applications have
been ported to the Itanium platform and that over 70,000
Itaniums have been deployed in enterprise-class businesses.
To help alliance members develop Itanium applications and
hardware, a series of Developer Days will be held and a
Solutions Center Network and catalog will be set up. The first
of the Developer Days will be held in Santa Clara this November.
The top 5: Today's most-read stories
1. How to solve Windows system crashes in minutes
<http://www.networkworld.com/nlservers7744>
2. Nortel faces uphill battle
<http://www.networkworld.com/nlservers8124>
3. Cisco pushes new security software
<http://www.networkworld.com/nlservers8125>
4. WLAN QoS specification approved
<http://www.networkworld.com/nlservers8269>
5. Somebody's got to pick up the 'Net's tab
<http://www.networkworld.com/nlservers8152>
_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Deni Connor
Deni Connor is a Senior Editor at Network World covering
storage, Unix, Novell, Macintosh and IT in Healthcare. You can
reach her at <mailto:dconnor@nww.com>.
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Sybase
It sounds so simple: if you collect enough business information,
you'll glean valuable insights that can drive both revenue
growth and competitive advantage. Along the way, however,
companies are discovering that managing the explosive growth of
online data can prove a formidable challenge. Here's how to
assess your data management style, and maximize your
opportunities to turn online data into business opportunity.
Click here for more on taming the data explosion.
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=116803
_______________________________________________________________
ARCHIVE LINKS
Archive of the Servers newsletter:
http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/servers/index.html
Servers/Desktop Research Center:
http://www.networkworld.com/topics/servers-desktops.html
_______________________________________________________________
FEATURED READER RESOURCE
IT PROS SHARE THEIR TALES OF MAKING ITIL WORK
Running an enterprise network is challenging. IT organizational
change can be even more so if managers don't balance efforts
proportionally across people, process and technology.
Implementing best practices frameworks such as Information
Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) can help, but they
introduce their own set of challenges. Click here for more:
<http://www.networkworld.com/news/2005/092205-itil.html>
_______________________________________________________________
May We Send You a Free Print Subscription?
You've got the technology snapshot of your choice delivered
at your fingertips each day. Now, extend your knowledge by
receiving 51 FREE issues to our print publication. Apply
today at http://www.subscribenw.com/nl2
International subscribers click here:
http://nww1.com/go/circ_promo.html
_______________________________________________________________
SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES
To subscribe or unsubscribe to any Network World e-mail
newsletters, go to:
<http://www.nwwsubscribe.com/Changes.aspx>
To change your e-mail address, go to:
<http://www.nwwsubscribe.com/ChangeMail.aspx>
Subscription questions? Contact Customer Service by replying to
this message.
This message was sent to: networking.world@gmail.com
Please use this address when modifying your subscription.
_______________________________________________________________
Have editorial comments? Write Jeff Caruso, Newsletter Editor,
at: <mailto:jcaruso@nww.com>
Inquiries to: NL Customer Service, Network World, Inc., 118
Turnpike Road, Southborough, MA 01772
For advertising information, write Kevin Normandeau, V.P. of
Online Development, at: <mailto:sponsorships@nwfusion.com>
Copyright Network World, Inc., 2005
No comments:
Post a Comment