By
Stephen Shankland
Thursday, July 13 2006 09:00 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39374800,00.htm
SAN FRANCISCO--No, Sun Microsystems' 33.25-inch-tall Sun Blade 8000 is not
too big, company executives say.
Sun's blade chassis dwarfs Hewlett-Packard's 17.5-inch C-class BladeSystem
and IBM's 15.75-inch BladeCenter H, but Sun argues that big blade servers are
the wave of the future and a way Sun can get ahead--and besides, two smaller
blade chassis are in the works.
"Size matters," said new Chief
Executive Jonathan Schwartz at an event here Wednesday launch
the Sun Blade 8000 and two other AMD Opteron-based machines.
Sun co-founder Andy
Bechtolsheim, the company's top x86 server designer and a respected computer
engineer, shed light on his technical reasoning for the move.
"It's not that our blade is too large. It's that the others are too small,"
he said.
Today's dual-core processors will be followed by models with four, eight and
16 cores, Bechtolsheim said. "There are two megatrends in servers:
miniaturization and multicore--quad-core, octo-core, hexadeci-core. You
definitely want bigger blades with more memory and more input-output."
When blade server leaders IBM and HP introduced their second-generation blade
chassis earlier this year, both chose larger products. IBM's grew 3.5 inches
taller, while HP's grew 7 inches taller. But opinions vary on whether
Bechtolsheim's prediction of even larger systems will come true.
"You're going to have bigger chassis," said IDC analyst John Humphries,
because blade server applications are expanding from lower-end tasks such as
e-mail to higher-end tasks such as databases. On the more cautious side is
Illuminata analyst Gordon Haff, who said that with IBM and HP just at the
beginning of a new blade chassis generation, "I don't see them rushing to add
additional chassis any time soon."
Business reasons as well as technology reasons led Sun to re-enter the blade
server arena with big blades rather than more conventional smaller models that
sell in higher volumes, said the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company's top server
executive, John Fowler. "We believe there is a market for a high-end
capabilities. And sometimes you go to where the competition isn't," Fowler said.
Blade servers are an increasingly important part of the computer business,
with consistent double-digit growth easily outpacing the overall server market.
IDC estimates that 500,000 blade servers were sold in 2005, or 7 percent of the
total market, with customers spending US$2.1 billion. In 2010, the analyst firm
projects that to increase to 3 million shipments, or about 25 percent of the
market, with customer spending of US$11.2 billion, analyst Jean Bozman said.
Sun says big blades are better, but it plans at least two smaller models in
coming months.
The first, due by the end of the year, is geared for high-performance
technical computing customers. It will use the same four-processor blades as the
Sun Blade 8000, but because of more compact power supplies and other changes,
will be only 24.5 inches tall, Bechtolsheim said in an interview.
Then, in early 2007, Sun plans a business-oriented model Bechtolsheim
confirmed is code-named Constellation. This model will be geared for
dual-processor blades, Fowler said.