server

This is an interesting turn of events. Lately, startups like Calxeda and SeaMicro have been making waves by enticing data center operators with the promise of potent yet power-sipping servers using low-watt processors that are decidedly non-standard on servers. Namely, ARM- and Intel Atom-based chips, respectively. Now it turns out that SeaMicro sees some value, or at least [...]

Read more SeaMicro looks beyond Atom for more server sales

by Pedro Hernandez on February 4, 2012 · 1 comment

Remember that report about Calxeda and HP teaming up for low-power ARM servers? Well, now it’s official and it even has a name: Project Moonshot. To get the industry used to the idea of computing on servers built around ARM processors, HP is laying the groundwork with a couple of initiatives. First is Project Pathfinder, which [...]

Read more HP’s ARM server ‘Moonshot’

by Pedro Hernandez on November 1, 2011 · 0 comments

Things are getting exciting on the computer server front. For a couple of years, an Austin, Texas-based startup called Calxeda (formerly Smooth-Stone) has been making the case for energy efficient servers using ARM processors — that currently dominate the smartphone and tablet markets — as it prepared to commercialize its tech. Now it looks like [...]

Read more Calxeda to mainstream ARM servers with HP partnership

by Pedro Hernandez on October 27, 2011 · 0 comments

Today’s impressive statistic comes courtesy of this Computerworld article that explores how the defense contractor is cutting energy costs, to the tune of  ”$23 million in annual savings” in 2010 with a host of energy efficient IT strategies. One of the ways the IT sustainability pros at Raytheon are achieving this is by taking a [...]

Read more Raytheon saves 30 percent in IT energy costs by raising temps

by Pedro Hernandez on October 24, 2011 · 0 comments

Over the past couple of years, some startups have been using mobile chips as a way to bring high performance computing to the data center in the form of low-power, space-saving servers. On Friday, August 19, one of those startups, SeaMicro, will be discussing the tech behind its Intel Atom-powered SM10000-64HD server (pictured above) during [...]

Read more SeaMicro to show cool Atom-powered server tech at Hot Chips

by Pedro Hernandez on August 17, 2011 · 1 comment

Some interesting insights from Facebook this week as the company broadcasts some of the thinking behind its IT strategy. And instead of submitting to the virtualization craze that’s spreading through corporate data centers, the social networking giant is throwing its weight behind microservers. This comes as Intel announces plans for Xeon- and Atom-based processors for [...]

Read more Facebook: Microservers yes, virtualization no

by Pedro Hernandez on March 17, 2011 · 0 comments

How many of your servers have been around for a decade? Not many, it’s safe to assume. (None ideally.) Chances are that the servers you deployed in 2001 were replaced 3-5 years later. And if there are a couple stragglers still around, they’re costing you a bundle in electricity and rack space. Fortunately, longevity is [...]

Read more The 10-year server?

by Pedro Hernandez on January 31, 2011 · 1 comment

SeaMicro, you’re on your own. (And it could be a good thing.) According to Intel’s vice president and general manager of its Data Center Group, Kirk Skaugen, the chipmaker won’t be making a push into the server space with its low-power Atom processor. The market for servers comprised of several Atom processors, like the ones [...]

Read more Intel on server chips: Atom out, McAfee in

by Pedro Hernandez on September 30, 2010 · 1 comment

As expected, ARM officially announced its new Cortex-A chip design and in addition to specs that portend a new generation of powerhouse smartphones, it looks like ARM is finally laying  the groundwork for some serious competition in the server processor space. ARM’s latest design is an upgrade in every regard, from clockspeed (up to 2.5 [...]

Read more ARM’s Cortex-A15: From smartphones to green data centers

by Pedro Hernandez on September 10, 2010 · 0 comments

Irvine, Calif.-based Solarflare Communications announced the availability of network adapters that, because of the company’s low-power SFC9000 chipset, offers high-speed networking for servers while helping to trim energy costs. And not just for any servers either, but systems that drive virtualized and/or cloud environments thanks to its hardware assisted virtual I/O acceleration for VMware, Microsoft [...]

Read more Solarflare announces low-power 10GbE server adapters

by Pedro Hernandez on September 8, 2010 · 0 comments