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IBM to offer slimmed-down blade chassis for SMBs

By Robert McMillan , IDG News Service , 10/22/2004
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IBM next month will begin selling a new slimmed-down version of its BladeCenter server chassis aimed at enticing small and midsized businesses into blade computing. The company is also set Friday to begin selling five new reference architectures for BladeCenter products, with the same goal in mind.

"We want to dispel the notion that blades are only for large enterprises," said Juhi Jotwani, director for BladeCenter alliances at IBM. She estimated that 30% of IBM's blade sales come from SMBs.

The new chassis, which begins shipping Nov. 24, will use the same blade servers as IBM's current chassis, but it will be less expensive and devoid of certain features, including a floppy disk drive, a second, redundant, management module, and support for attachment to storage-area networks.

IBM will initially offer the SMB chassis at a 90-day promotional rate of approximately $1,000, Jotwani said. Final list pricing has not yet been determined, she said.

As of Friday, IBM will begin offering a number of new "Business in a Box" reference architectures - documentation which contains suggestions on how best to set up and deploy the systems.

For users of its Intel-based blade servers, IBM will offer architectures centered around Microsoft or Linux operating systems, as well as SteelEye Technology's high availability software and Citrix's hosted client application. Additionally, the Armonk, N.Y., computer vendor will announce a reference architecture for the life sciences industry that uses IBM's Power-based JS20 blades.

IBM decided against offering pre-configured bundles of its products, Jotwani said. "SMB customers just hate bundles, because they feel that one way or the other, they're paying for something they don't need," she said. "The whole point is to give the customer the reference architecture and the building blocks to implement the architecture."

The SMB chassis might be useful for customers who are comfortable without the redundancy that comes with two management modules, said Jerry Chen, senior director for enterprise services with NeuStar in Sterling, Va.

"It can be used as an entry-level blade server that doesn't require high-availability service-level agreements," he said. The $1,000 promotional pricing is "a very good price point to get into this," he added.

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