Americas

  • United States

NetFlash: Enterprise users scooping up blade servers

Opinion
Oct 07, 20032 mins
Networking

Vendors sold $43 million in blade servers last year, and $47 million in just the first quarter of this year. By 2007, sales are expected to reach $6 billion. While service providers are among those driving this phenomenal growth, there are also lots of enterprise companies jumping on the bandwagon as well. Here’s why. Enterprise users scooping up blade servers http://www.nwfusion.com/news/2003/1006bladeusers.html?net

Vendors sold $43 million in blade servers last year, and $47 million in just the first quarter of this year. By 2007, sales are expected to reach $6 billion. While service providers are among those driving this phenomenal growth, there are also lots of enterprise companies jumping on the bandwagon as well. Here’s why.

Enterprise users scooping up blade servers

https://www.nwfusion.com/news/2003/1006bladeusers.html?net

NetScreen buys Neoteris for SSL abilities

The time-honored technique of buying your way into a market is alive and well. After much speculation, yesterday NetScreen announced it plans to purchase Neoteris because it is leading the relatively new market of remote access equipment based on Secure Sockets Layer, and NetScreen wants a piece of that action.

https://www.nwfusion.com/news/2003/1006netneo.html?net

Court rejects FCC stance on cable Internet

A federal appeals court has rejected the Federal Communications Commission stance that cable-based Internet services are an information service rather than a telecommunication service.

https://www.nwfusion.com/news/2003/1007courtrejec.html?net

Customers get more time to quit Microsoft’s Java

In what should come as a relief to some customers, Microsoft said it will continue to provide support for its Java virtual machine software until the end of September 2004, 10 months longer than it had originally planned, under a new licensing agreement announced Tuesday with Sun.