Market Roundup October 8, 2004 Sun Thumper and the Opteron Chase WebSphere into the Stratosphere |
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Sun Thumper and the Opteron Chase
It has been reported that Sun is planning a very
aggressive thrust into the market with new Opteron-based products and offerings
in 2005. The internal code name for this effort is Thumper. At the heart of
Thumper is the data center-in-a-box concept in which Sun ships pre-tested,
pre-configured bundles of servers, storage, networking, and software. The
company advocates that this is a better, less costly customer alternative than
inhouse customer assembly of components into a solution. Sun has promoted this
type of offering in the past, but previous offerings were based on UltraSPARC and other Sun proprietary technology. By
bringing the concept to the Opteron market Sun reportedly plans to capitalize
on sales of its current two- and four-way Opteron processor-based servers.
Thumper will feature price/performance-optimized Opteron processor-based
systems, packaged with Sun networking and file system technology. The 64-bit
release of open Solaris 10 will be integral to the Thumper effort. Sun plans to
pre-configure the offerings to work with a wide range of third party networking
gear, storage boxes, and software.
We believe Thumper further reinforces Sun’s growing commitment to the x86 market and could benefit Sun, Sun’s installed base and new customer acquisition, and present a major threat to competitors such as HP. However, Thumper will have to deliver on IT cost containment, industry-leading price/performance, and the promised packaging; otherwise, this is all just ho-hum rhetoric and conjecture. In short, Sun’s exploitation of the power of Opteron should provide an edge in sales to those who seek cost containment and consolidation as well as SMBs who would likely find data center-in-a-box packaging attractive. In conjunction with the Solaris 10 open source initiative, Thumper would offer Sun developers and partners additional reasons to remain loyal to Sun and could further stimulate Sun’s hardware sales. A performance-optimized Thumper system could well rise to lead the pack of Opteron-based server systems from a networking, processing power and software viewpoint as Sun is one of the very few who have made a far-reaching public commitment to the platform. AMD probably could not be happier to hear about Thumper. If successful, it would certainly drive adoption of Opteron. From our vantage point, Sun continues to position itself to win the Opteron chase; however, this race has just begun with the marketplace jury still out deliberating its ultimate verdict on Opteron and Sun’s role therein.
WebSphere into the Stratosphere
IBM has announced enhancements to WebSphere Applications
Server, WebSphere Applications Server on zAAP
(Applications Assist Processor), WebSphere extended development, developer
software, business integration modeler, WebSphere Portal, WebSphere everyplace
access and connection, and WebSphere voice server. WebSphere Application Server
and zAAP provide the high-availability services,
simultaneous detection, and recovery capabilities; traditional mainframe RAS
(reliability, availability, and scalability) for WebSphere. The other major
focus of this announcement was to bring full integration of WebSphere
distributed applications to the mainframe zSeries environment. WebSphere
Extended Deployment leverages WebServer Application
z/OS for the development and integration of distributed applications with the
mainframe ecosystem.
By addressing integration and availability issues, IBM has
taken a further step to align WebSphere with the zSeries at the center of the
on demand universe. Additionally, IBM has sharpened WebSphere differentiation
against competitors such as Microsoft, SAP, BEA, and Oracle through Web
services standards (e.g. JAX-RPC); availability, simultaneous detection, and
recovery; and comprehensive business-driven development tools capabilities
(e.g. generate code from process design). By contrast, Microsoft can only print
Visio graphics where WebSphere provides for actual code generation. Others such
as SAP NetWeaver are based on a proprietary stack,
where WebSphere is a fully portable J2EE specification and Microsoft solutions
are .NET based.
In our opinion WebSphere provides capabilities that put IBM in a leadership position in on demand computing. Both pure software plays, such as those by SAP, and traditional hardware software vendors, such as HP, have reason for concern. IBM is bringing a potent combination of both hardware and software to the customer’s door, in an offering that is reasonably balanced between proprietary and open, with scalability from small to enterprise size. We should imagine that IBM’s installed base, particularly those in the large enterprise space, are reassured by what IBM is offering. The IBM WebSphere solution offers a path for legacy application integration with the ongoing IT requirement for flexible, cost-contained service delivery, in line with rapidly changing business objectives. SMB customers are probably less content. The IBM high-availability, lights-out self-correcting and healing capabilities have yet to be extended to the SMB space, where such capabilities are as important, if not more so, than in large enterprises. The downside for all customers is, that although reasonably open, buy-in to WebSphere still represents acceptance of a certain philosophy and architectural commitment that can not be rapidly discarded for another alternative. Initial WebSphere experience seems to indicate that this is a sound alternative but the WebSphere mantle will be soundly tested by enterprises as they move forward with their strategic IT plans.
IBM Announces New p5 Express Systems
IBM has announced two members of the eServer p5 Express
family of servers, the p5-520 Express and the p5-550 Express. Express systems
are specially priced system configurations that require customers to purchase
certain combinations of processors, memory, and disk drives. In return,
customers get special pricing for selected items, depending on the system. The
systems are priced lower than their normal counterparts and are capable of
running AIX or SuSE or RedHat Linux.
IBM positions these systems for small and mid-market
companies who want the power and capabilities of Power5 systems but need lower
prices. Typically the processors in these systems run a little slower and they
may have fewer options than their upmarket brethren. However,
these Express systems do have all of the features of p5 systems including the
sophisticated partitioning and virtualization. These systems follow on the
heels of the p5-570 Express providing a full line of p5 Express systems for
SMBs. The prices, as you might expect, fall between the OpenPower
systems designed to run only Linux and the regular p5 family. Customers should
be able to find a system close to their pricing and feature/function
requirements from IBM at this point.
IBM has been offering Express versions of its hardware and software for awhile now, as it has found success amongst small and mid-market customers in particular with these systems. In addition IBM has OpenPower systems, which are designed to entice Linux users who might otherwise go to other platforms. These products are all designed to respond to pricing issues without actually initiating pricing wars between UNIX systems and x86-based systems. IBM continues to position its Power5-based systems as the industry standard for 64-bit computing. By offering a full range of products based on features and scalability as well as on pricing, the company ensures that it can appeal to the widest range of customers possible without sacrificing the leading-edge technologies that make 64-bit computing so appealing. If IBM can build ISV and business partner excitement for these systems equal to the caliber of technology they offer, then it may give volume vendors a run for the customer’s money.
StorageTek Absorbs Storability
This week StorageTek acquired
Storability in an asset purchase transaction including all intellectual
property, software license agreements, customer contracts, and other assets of
Storability. StorageTek believes that seventy
Storability employees will join the company. Storability provides storage
resource management (SRM) software with its Global Storage Manager (GSM)
product. The product allows users to measure and manage their storage resources
with a centralized view of infrastructure and some policy-based automation of
storage management. StorageTek has been Storability’s
only reseller partner and was responsible for approximately 75% of
Storability’s forty customers. Previously StorageTek
had obtained Storability’s Operations Center to launch its Remote Managed
Storage service offering.
StorageTek was one of the first
vendors to embrace the concept of information lifecycle management, and it did
a good job of explaining what it meant before ILM became another marketing term
used and abused by the industry. Oddly enough, StorageTek
has been one of the last companies to adopt software targeting that ILM
strategy, which has weakened its position somewhat. The purchase of Storability
is a good first start, as it gives the company an SRM product that is already
well understood within the company. The harder part will be that competitors
such as EMC, Tivoli, and CreekPath are well ahead both
in market share and in product functionality. It will also be interesting to
see how far StorageTek goes with its software
strategy. It still needs migration capabilities as well as more sophisticated
provisioning capabilities. We’d assume the company would need to continue to
buy versus build, as software has not been a core competency.
The other challenge for StorageTek will to get its channel to adopt and begin using the product. Previously StorageTek was Storability’s only reseller, and although it drove the majority of the business, there are still relatively few customers with the solution. If the company can educate and train its channel properly, this can become a useful tool for StorageTek’s channel to start conversations with existing tape customers and demonstrate to them that StorageTek is serious about being an ILM company and is building the pieces of the solutions to make this possible. It could become a useful way to get to know the customers better, as the customers can use GSM to get to know storage better.