- What does Cisco have against Quebec?
- Attrition.org nails another nitwit
- Diary of a deliberately spammed housewife
- Seven cloud-computing security risks
- 20 great Windows open source projects
News | Newsletters | Podcasts | Chats | Opinions | RSS Feeds | This Week In Print | IT Careers | Community | Reports | Downloads | Slideshows | New Data Center
Partner Sites:App Performance | On Demand Security | Networking Solution | SOA | Value of WDS
Linux hardware and clustering company Penguin Computing is releasing two new blade servers in its BladeRunner family, the 4130 and the 4140, based on 64-bit chips from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices respectively. Penguin will be showing off the blades at the LinuxWorld show taking place in San Francisco from Monday to Thursday.
"In the data center environment, space, power consumption and thermal considerations in relation to heat emission are becoming increasingly important," said Bill Cook, Penguin's senior vice president of services and sales. He said the new blades are best suited for use in data center consolidation and departmental clustering. Offering 64-bit blades is part of Penguin's ongoing strategy to provide Linux hardware "across the board," from the midlevel to high-end computing, he said.
The BladeRunner 4130 is based on Intel's Xeon EM64T 64-bit processor and is available now, while the BladeRunner 4140, based on AMD's dual-core Opteron HE chip, should ship on Sept. 15, according to Matt Hammell, Penguin's blade specialist.
Penguin debuted the first member of its BladeRunner blade line , based on an Intel 32-bit Xeon processor, in December of last year.
All three BladeRunner blades featuring the three different chips are housed in the same chassis, Hammell said, a 4U high chassis that can hold a maximum of 12 dual processor blades. The BladeRunners provide customers with three times the CPU density of a typical 1U server, according to Penguin, with a low power consumption of 133 watts. Each blade has between 512M bytes and 8G bytes of memory and 48 Gigabit Ethernet ports.
The blades include remote-management software featuring "lights-out" management for remote power-down and the ability to reset systems that are running in either active or standby mode, Hammell said. Penguin also offers a BladeRunner in a Cluster in a Box configuration that comes with preinstalled Scyld Beowulf Linux clustering software from Penguin's Scyld Software subsidiary.
The starting price for three BladeRunner blades is $8,994.
The Penguin executives commented on IBM's announcement last week that it plans to set up a vendor body, Blade.org , to promote BladeCenter-based servers and blade interoperability. "Interoperability between blades is definitely a concern," Hammell said, pointing out that BladeRunner blades are of a smaller form factor than IBM's offerings. "We will track consortium efforts to see what will best serve over time," Cook said. "It's possible to go to two standards, one would be too constricting."
IBM spent all that money on a mass rollout of PGP Whole Disk Encryption, just when its discovered that...- Anonymous
Partner Content
Explore the Ultrium Edge
The powerful tape technology can address data security with tape encryption as well as long term data protection.
Find out more
Disk and Tape Square Off
Discover what disk and tape really cost -- and which solution provides lower total cost of ownership and optimizes energy use for your organization
Download the White Paper
Don't Fall For The Myths
The Clipper Group explores the truth behind the myths of tape, digging into the misconceptions in the disk vs. tape debate.
Download the White Paper
Will You Add Tape Too?
Over two thirds of disk-only users look to add tape back into storage infrastructure according to recent survey.
Download Survey Information
Comment