Power7+ Systems Due To Launch October 3
September 24, 2012 Timothy Prickett Morgan
Ladies and gentlemen, start your checkbooks. We’ve been telling you all about the impending Power7+ processors and speculating on the related servers for so long you probably think they are already here and can’t figure out why they aren’t available from IBM‘s business partner channel. It looks like we won’t have to wait much longer to see what Big Blue is going to do to ratchet up its assault on Oracle and Hewlett-Packard in the RISC/Unix racket while preserving its IBM i platform and keeping the X86 legions at bay. It’s a delicate bit of maneuvering that IBM has to do, and it will be interesting to see the economics of the forthcoming Power7+ systems and how aggressively the company will take the fight to Intel and to a lesser degree Advanced Micro Devices. I am also thinking about what IBM must do to make the transition to Power7+ iron both technically and economically possible. I will share my thoughts about this in next week’s issue of The Four Hundred, because they are at this point not yet fully formed. In the meantime, here’s what I can tell you. IBM is hosting a “smarter computing” event on October 3 at 11 a.m. Eastern, which is exactly when rival Oracle will be having its Wednesday keynote toward the end of its OpenWorld customer and partner extravaganza in San Francisco. That is when the top brass at Oracle’s systems business–executive vice president of systems John Fowler, senior VP of systems technology Juan Loaiza, and chief corporate architect Ed Screven–will take the stage to presumably unveil new systems based on the Sparc T5 processor. The timing is no doubt not a coincidence. AMD and Intel are constantly trying to get journos and analysts to attend competing events. It happens all the time in my line of business. It looks like IBM’s October 3 Smarter Computing event is more broad-based than just the launch of Power7+ machinery. (You can register for the event here. Rod Adkins, senior vice president of IBM’s Systems & Technology Group will host the event, and will of course be joined by Colin Parris, general manager of the Power Systems unit (which was split from mainframes earlier this year). Satya Sharma, an IBM Fellow who was chief architect of the AIX operating system and one of the key people behind the development of the Power7 and Power7+ processors, will also be speaking at the event. Presentations will also be made by Brian Truskowski, general manager of IBM’s System Storage division and Paulo Carvao, vice president of System z global sales will be on hand as well. It looks like IBM doesn’t think its new System z EC12 machines got enough love or ink. (I certainly did my share, that much I know.) Maybe IBM is starting at the high end of the Power Systems line with the Power7+ chips and wants to make comparisons? There are at least two things with that line of thinking. First, IBM doesn’t like to make comparisons across its big iron machines and second, IBM never starts a roll-out at the top. But, there could be a first time, and this might be it. And maybe IBM wants to position the System EC12 against the Power 795+ machine rather than have semi-pros like myself do it for them. The next day, IBM is hosting a Twitter chat at 1 p.m. Eastern hosted by IT analyst Adrian Bowles and IT journo Larry Dignan. You can follow the chat on hashtag, #ChatSC, or log onto it through this link. The theme of the chat is going to be enterprise systems, with lots of talk about cloud, big data, and security, according to the invitation. RELATED STORIES IBM To Stop Peddling Power6+ Processors Soon Performance Choices For Power7+ Servers Could Be Complicated IBM Power7+ Chips Give Servers A Double Whammy Power7+ Chips Juiced With Faster Clocks, Memory Compression Some Insight Into Those Future Power7+ Processors Q&A With Colin Parris, IBM’s Power Systems GM That Perplexing Power7+ Processor More Details Emerge on Future Power7+ and Power8 Chips IBM Is Prepping Power7+ and Pondering Power8
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