Sun Tuesday announced it has teamed up with two software companies to offer low-cost financial information exchange – FIX – bundles for the financial services community running on Intel-based Linux or Sun Solaris platforms.Sun Tuesday announced it has teamed up with two software companies to offer low-cost financial information exchange – FIX – bundles for the financial services community running on Intel-based Linux or Sun Solaris platforms.FIX is a messaging protocol based on XML that was developed for the financial industry so users could conduct securities transactions in real-time. David Littlewood, director of financial services for Sun, in Menlo Park, Calif., said that FIX is becoming the de facto standard in this industry.“The more people that use it, the easier it becomes for different parties in the securities industry to communicate together,” he said. “So if you want to place a trade you can use a standard messaging protocol because you can assume that the exchange at the other end will receive messages in a FIX format.” FIX is commonly deployed in large securities firms that conduct trades, called “sellers,” such as Merrill Lynch & Co. and The Goldman Sachs Group, but the same level of adoption has not been seen on the buyer side, Littlewood said.“The buyer side customer hasn’t typically invested in technology the same way the sell side has. They are typically looking for a lower cost solution. They don’t need the same scale and levels of throughput the Merrill Lynches of this world require,” he said. That’s why Sun has worked with two of its software partners – B2Bits, in London, England, and Financial Fusion, a division of Sybase in Concord, Mass. – to create low-cost FIX products, he said.“The market dynamic that we’re seeing is that people are looking to get access to commodity hardware,” Littlewood said.Sun will be pre-installing B2Bits’ FIXEdge or Financial Fusion’s GlobalFix Lite on its Sun Fire LX50 server, running Red Hat Linux on an Intel Pentium III processor. Users can also buy the software pre-configured to run on Sun’s Solaris x86 Platform Edition, the company says.B2Bits and Financial Fusion are competitors in the FIX market.“They compete openly, but for the purposes of this they’ve actually both worked with us to provide a solution, and the price for both is the same,” Littlewood said.In the near future, Sun also plans to offer the two software packages on its Sun Fire v60x and Sun Fire v65x servers, with either Red Hat Linux or the Solaris x86 Platform Edition. If users intend to deploy up to four processors Sun recommends they select Linux, but if they’re looking for a more scalable solution Sun says Solaris is the best choice.These bundles cost $2,500 per month for a three-year lease regardless of configuration.“Sun has a strong presence in the financial space and there’s obviously an interest in Intel-based servers in the financial space,” said Gordon Haff, senior analyst and IT advisor at Illuminata.Sun introduced Intel-based servers last year, but continues to sell servers based on its 64-bit UltraSPARC (Scalable Processor Architecture) chips too. Related content feature 5 ways to boost server efficiency Right-sizing workloads, upgrading to newer servers, and managing power consumption can help enterprises reach their data center sustainability goals. By Maria Korolov Dec 04, 2023 9 mins Green IT Green IT Green IT news Omdia: AI boosts server spending but unit sales still plunge A rush to build AI capacity using expensive coprocessors is jacking up the prices of servers, says research firm Omdia. By Andy Patrizio Dec 04, 2023 4 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI Data Center feature What is Ethernet? History, evolution and roadmap The Ethernet protocol connects LANs, WANs, Internet, cloud, IoT devices, Wi-Fi systems into one seamless global communications network. By John Breeden Dec 04, 2023 11 mins Networking news IBM unveils Heron quantum processor and new modular quantum computer IBM also shared its 10-year quantum computing roadmap, which prioritizes improvements in gate operations and error-correction capabilities. By Michael Cooney Dec 04, 2023 5 mins CPUs and Processors High-Performance Computing Data Center Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe