Archive for the 'Software' Category

Published by Admin on 16 Jul 2008

Christmas comes early! - SPARC processor in IBM Blade Form

T2BC

 

We use the IBM Blade Center H chassis in our Data Center along with blades from other vendors including Sun Micro.  I have told both our IBM rep and Sun Rep that our life would be so much easier if we could get a SPARC based processor in an IBM Blade. <insert visual of well dressed sales guy rolling in the floor laughing>  Now that wish is a reality.  However, it is made by a third party and I haven’t heard/asked yet as to what using this in a IBM supported Blade Center would do to the support contract.

The article where I got this information from can be found at the register.co.uk website.  A single T2 processor with up to 32GB of memory can be in configured in the blade.  To see more of the specs, check out this website for the vendor Themis Computer.  If anyone is out there deploys this blade or even tests it, let me know.  I would love to get one to put in our lab.

If this works out, we could get to the point of only using IBM Blade Center H chassis and not have to maintain and support both the IBM and SUN blade centers.  I so love consolidation and the end to server proliferation.

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Published by JP on 12 Apr 2008

Product End of Life Link Roundup

You ever need find out if your product (hardware/software) is supportable or wonder why the maintenance costs are skyrocketing? The odds are your hardware or software is on the end of life list.

Here is a link round up of the public “end of life” (EOL) website listings for some IT vendors. If you are a consumer or vendor and would like to contribute a EOL or EOSL link to this, please email eol (at) itminddesign.com or leave a comment below.

Software:


Hardware:

*For some reason, Sun has two lists, one public and one more comprehensive if you have a support contract. Why make someone pay to see a vendors list of equipment on “death watch” is beyond me.

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Published by JP on 30 Mar 2008

Sun and University of Texas: Super Computer - Everything is bigger in Texas

Sun Unveils The Most Powerful Super-Computer on the Planet. Click here for the story.


This is one amazing system. It will certainly make up for many inadequacies.

  • 504 Teraflops Peak Performance (504 trillion floating point operations per second)
  • The supercomputer contains 82 Sun Blade 6048 Modular Systems racks
  • Each rack holds 48 Sun Fire 6000 Blade Servers, for a total of 3,936
  • Each blade has four quad-core AMD processors
  • That makes a total of 15,744 AMD processors, with 62,976 cores!
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Published by JP on 08 Feb 2008

Female HTTP Response Codes

Even being a married fella I can relate to some of these. I thought these HTTP “error codes” to men’s advances where hilarious.

Response Code HTTP Meaning What Women Mean
400 Bad Request Your pickup line sucked. Go away.
401 Unauthorized Not while my boyfriend is watching
402 Payment Required I’m a hooker

There is a ton more, check them out at Kevin @ Sun Micro’s blog entry : /dev/null/kevin: Dating and HTTP Response Codes

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Published by JP on 24 Jan 2008

Sun Microsystems & Oracle - A tale of two companies

Oracle & SunI had previously written about Sun buying MySQL. Since then I had some more time to process the event and wanted to add some deeper thought about the matter. The same day that Sun acquires MySQL, Oracle buys BEA Systems. I mention this because it is an interesting set of events for both companies. Sun continues down its path of becoming an open source software company while leaving behind the proprietary world of its hardware. I know Sun did acquire StorageTek back in 2005 for 1.4 Billion USD. I do think that purchase was a mistake but that was under the watch of Scott McNealy. Sun, just like IBM, has seen the writing on the wall.

However, Oracle, who had tried many months before, finally came to an agreement to acquire BEA Systems. There was bit of press warfare going on between Oracle and BEA. Oracle made a low ball offer for the company and Oracle refused to pay anymore. Well, Sir Larry must have had a change of heart because he paid up. Oracle and its many products are all proprietary. Also, BEA Systems and its products, though some are built and utilize Java, are proprietary. They both should make some serious cash as customers pay big time money for the licenses and support from those two companies. However, I am intrigued as to what is going to happen to the Weblogic Application suite and the Oracle Application Server suite since these are competing products. If you utilize Oracle Forms you don’t have any choice but to use Oracle Application Server, which one of the Business Unit applications the Data Center requires Oracle forms.

With IBM, Sun, HP, and others embracing and moving more toward providing and interacting with open source, I am curious as to why Oracle has hung in there and focuses on being proprietary. First Peoplesoft in 2004 and now BEA Systems this month. I know Oracle offers the Unbreakable Linux which was a play to compete with Redhat and take some revenue away from them. We haven’t used Unbreakable Linux and don’t plan to. It seems that Oracle really isn’t taking any significant market share from Redhat and there have been issues with Oracle supporting Linux. Maybe with the BEA acquisition Oracle will change the Weblogic support model to be like Redhat’s JBoss application server to again try and take some cash away from Redhat.

Who knows what Larry and Oracle will do next? I’m surprised Oracle has not gone after a hardware vendor. Then they can pretty much offer the whole stack, Use Apache in the web tier, Weblogic or Oracle Application Server in the Application Tier, all connecting to Oracle Databases Enterprise or RAC. BEA has Tuxedo for an SOA type architecture, which has connectors into CORBA, Weblogic, and can even touch back into the legacy tier — the Unisys Mainframe world with the E-Link and OSI-TP products. It will be a nice portfolio of products for Oracle, but with the Open Source movement continuing to gain momentum it begs the question to see who wins the tug-of-war — proprietary or open source software?

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