Mid
Windows & Linux Edition
Volume 1, Number 26 -- August 14, 2002

Sun, IBM Announce New Linux Servers at LinuxWorld


by Alex Woodie

New Intel-based Linux servers were announced by Sun Microsystems and IBM at LinuxWorld this week, as the two server rivals jostled for position at the low-end of the market for Linux servers. IBM also sought to capitalize on Sun's late entry into the Linux server market by announcing a new program to migrate customers' UNIX applications running on Sun's Sparc servers to Linux running on IBM hardware.


Sun's new LX50 servers, which have gone by the codename "Big Bear," are thin, rack-mountable machines based on the design work done by Cobalt, the hardware appliance vendor Sun bought in 2000. The LX50 is available with either one or two Intel Pentium III 1.4 GHz processors (based on the ServerWorks HE SL chipset with a 133 MHz front side bus), 512 KB of L2 cache memory, 256 MB to 6 GB of main memory, two SCSI hard drive bays (for 36 GB or 72 GB disks), dual integrated Ethernet ports, a dual channel Ultra 160 SCSI controller, and two 66 MHz PCI slots for I/O. The LX50 starts at $2,795 for a single Intel Pentium III 1.4GHz processor with 512 MB of memory. The two processor model with 1 GB of memory goes for $4,295, while the two-processor model with 2 GB of memory is listed at $5,295.

The LX50 comes standard with Sun's Linux distribution, called Sun Linux 5.0, although users can opt to install Sun's 32-bit Solaris 8 Unix operating system if they prefer. Whichever way customers go, the LX50 ships with a bunch of software and applications. For users choosing Sun Linux 5.0, these applications include Sun Open Net Environment (Sun ONE) application and development tools, the Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition, the Sun Chili!Soft ASP Web server plug-in software, the Sun Grid Engine software, and the mySQL database. For Solaris, the LX50 ships with the Java 2 Platform, standard Edition, the SunScreen firewall software, the Sun Grid Engine software, the mySQL database, and Apache Web server software.

The LX50 is the first general purpose Linux server produced by Sun. Sun has walked a fine line on the Linux-on-Intel issue to avoid damaging the business it does selling integrated servers running its version of the UNIX operating system, Solaris, and running on its proprietary, 64-bit Sparc processor architecture. That Sun is now trying to compete in the Linux-on-Intel server business is a significant deviation from its core Solaris-on-Sparc business, industry watchers say, but Sun has strived to downplay the move. For additional information on the topic, read "Sun's New Lintel Servers Coming in August" in the June 26, 2002, issue of this newsletter.

On Monday, IBM announced its new Intel-based xSeries 335 server, which IBM intends to go head-to-head against Sun's new LX50. The rack-mountable xSeries 335 runs two of Intel's latest Xeon processors, features Ultra320 hard disk drives, integrated dual gigabit ethernet, and two 64-bit/100 MHz PCI-X slots. Like the LX50, IBM's xSeries 335 is available with two different operating systems, in this case, Linux or Microsoft Windows.

IBM also attacked sun by kicking off its new Solaris-to-Linux migration campaign. IBM is offering the services of a range of experts, such as system architects, database administrators, project managers and operating system specialists, to migrate customers' complete Solaris operating environments--including operating systems, databases, applications, servers, storage, networking, and security--from Solaris to Linux. IBM is also including financing as part of the deal.


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THIS ISSUE
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BACK ISSUES

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Sun, IBM Announce New Linux Servers at LinuxWorld

Dell Uses Red Hat, Oracle to Push Linux Against Unix

Microsoft Puts Out .NET Framework SP2

IBM Leans on Business Partner Channel to Push Server Sales


Editor
Timothy Prickett Morgan

Managing Editor
Mari Barrett

Contributing Editors:
Dan Burger
Joe Hertvik
Shannon O'Donnell
Victor Rozek
Hesh Wiener
Alex Woodie

Contact the Editors
Do you have a gripe, inside dope or an opinion?
Email the editors:
editors@itjungle.com



Last Updated: 8/14/02
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