tfh
Volume 20, Number 2 -- January 17, 2011

Going Full Spiral, Not Coming Full Circle

Published: January 17, 2011

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The Mayan calendar says the world is going to end in 2012, and in the unlikely event that doomsday should indeed come to pass, then 2011 will be the last year we have to worry about anything and make predictions about the future. But I doubt very much humanity will get off that easily. We surely have not for the past several million years from the studies I have read. The end of the world is a metaphor, and things long gone often return again, albeit slightly differently.

I was talking to a dear, old friend this week about the strangeness of life, about how people and places come and go, and then come back again, but usually in a way you didn't expect. If you think of history--your own personal one or the big one we all participate in collectively and study in school--we are often told that it is cyclical, that things come full circle. As far as I can tell, this is not an accurate metaphor. What I think happens is that things go full spiral, pushing out from the center while also orbiting a point in the space-time continuum. You come back to the same relative position on the curve, but you've moved outward too, and now you can see things with a little perspective. And then you do it again. You can't go back, you just keep moving and then some day, you get a sense of déjà vu, that you have seen this all before, but it is different. This makes sense if you think about it. A spiral unites circular motion with linear motion, the sense of the past with the onward progress of the future.

Maybe I have just had too much coffee today. Or too little.

So what does 2011 hold for the Power Systems-IBM i platform, and all of us who are in this ecosystem? A good question, and it would be refreshing to have more certainty than we do. But I have been thinking about this a lot, as I do this time of year, and I have a few thoughts to share.

To begin with, I expect IBM to post better results for its Power Systems line in 2011 than it did in 2010. By definition, this would have to be the case.

As we go to press with this issue of The Four Hundred, IBM has not yet revealed its financial results for the fourth quarter of last year, so it is hard to say what the relative compare will be in 2011. For the past decade or so, IBM has managed to get about $5 billion a year in hardware sales for its Power-based server lines, regardless of the labels it slapped on them, but in 2009, sales fell by 15 percent to $4.3 billion and in the first nine months of 2010, sales for Power Systems fell further by 13 percent to $2.6 billion. So if IBM has a great Q4 2010 and fills in some of the gap, it will very likely not be enough to get anywhere close to $4 billion in revenues. Crawling back to 2009's sales levels in 2011 will not be a return to normal. Or more precisely, having a Power Systems business that generates a fifth lower revenue than IBM, its resellers, and its ISV partners are used to might be the new normal. We'll see. I remain skeptical that Power Systems--and indeed, any proprietary or RISC technology--can return to pre-2008 sales levels because of the maturity of Windows and Linux and the very good bang for the buck that Xeon and Opteron systems offer.

That said, I will be happy to be proven wrong here. Thrilled, in fact.

One very easy and safe prediction is that there will be more consolidation in the IT industry, including private equity takeovers as well as company mergers. This will be the case so long as there is cheap money available to fund takeovers, thanks to the efforts of the U.S. government and its European and Japanese counterparts as they try to stimulate their economies. The wealthy and their hedge fund and private equity draft horses will be looking for somewhere other than the stock market and precious metals to stash their money so it can grow faster than the stock market, which is back to its pre-2008 levels now. Do you honestly think the state of the actual economy in the U.S., Europe, or Japan justifies the Dow Jones Industrial Average at nearly 12,000, the FTSE at over 6,000, and the Nikkei at over 10,000? I don't. But please, don't tell anyone because my retirement is in a 401(k).

So I see a year where the big get bigger, competition in established IT sectors gets calcified, and customers get turned upside-down for a good shaking to see what drops out of their pockets. And more importantly in the IBM i base, I see a lot of company founders who have been at this since the System/38 days deciding that now is a good time to cash in their chips and retire. Some of the biggest names in the AS/400 market have done it, and I expect more to do so. In fact, I would guess that a few of these privately held companies that we all know and love have already done so, but because they are private and don't talk about it, we don't even know it happened.

The one thing that I am not expecting a lot of is updates in the Power Systems hardware and software stack. As I already showed you early last year, the IBM i roadmap doesn't have i 7.2 coming out until the first half of 2012. There are two updates expected in 2011, however. That would be i 7.1.2 coming in the first half of this year and i 7.1.3 in the second half of 2011. I have no idea what either of these will include in terms of features, but I plan to do some digging to find out.

I am not expecting Power7+ processors to be announced any time soon, either. IBM is not under pressure to revamp its hardware until the third quarter, when Intel will get its eight-core "Sandy Bridge" Xeons and Advanced Micro Devices will get its 16-core "Interlagos" Opterons into the field. I don't think we'll see Power7+ iron until early 2012, in fact. That said, I saw in the Linux for PowerPC mailing list that the Power7+ hardware type was added to the Linux kernel in November 2010. And here is a bug fix for DB2 on AIX that affects machines with Power5, Power5+, Power6, Power7, and Power7+ processors.

So maybe there is Power7+ iron that will come out earlier than 2012.

No matter what, Power7+ chips will very likely be a shrink from the 45 nanometer wafer baking processes with Power7 chips down to 32 nanometer processes. I anticipate that IBM stays with the same basic chip design, with four, six, and eight cores activated and with the same L1 and L2 caches. The process shrink should allow Big Blue to crank the CPU clocks somewhere between 25 and 30 percent, and support DDR3 memory that runs at between 1.6 GHz and 2 GHz. The new Power7+ chips will no doubt be socket-compatible with the current Power Systems 7XX line, and if not, then someone should be fired.


RELATED STORIES

Top 10 IBM i Product and Technology Trends for 2011

The System iWant, 2010 Edition: Blade and Cookie Sheet Boxes

The System iWant, 2010 Edition: Entry Boxes

The System iWant, 2010 Edition: Midrange Boxes

The System iWant, 2010 Edition: Big Boxes

Power Systems i: Serve's Up

Now What?

The Official 2008 TPM System i Wish List

The System iWant, 2007 Edition

The eServer i6 and i7 Wish List

iSeries and OS/400 Wish List

The iDeal iSeries, Part 4

I Want, I Want, I Want: An AS/400 Wish List



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
HELP/SYSTEMS

Learn more about Robot/SCHEDULE Enterprise,
the easy-to-use job scheduling and server management tool
for your Windows, UNIX, and Linux servers.

Robot/SCHEDULE Enterprise uses a modern user interface
to build an event-driven schedule, quickly and easily,
across your systems for coordinated batch processing,
cross-system monitoring, and true enterprise scheduling.

Click here for more information.


Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Victor Rozek,
Jenny Thomas, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

SEQUEL Software:  FREE Webinar. Learn how ABSTRACT can smooth software development. Jan. 19
Townsend Security:  FREE Podcast! Key management best practices: What new PCI regulations say
System i Developer:  Upgrade your skills at RPG & DB2 Summit in Orlando, March 22-24

 

 

IT Jungle Store Top Book Picks

BACK IN STOCK: Easy Steps to Internet Programming for System i: List Price, $49.95

The iSeries Express Web Implementer's Guide: List Price, $49.95
The iSeries Pocket Database Guide: List Price, $59
The iSeries Pocket SQL Guide: List Price, $59
The iSeries Pocket WebFacing Primer: List Price, $39
Migrating to WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49
Getting Started with WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49
The All-Everything Operating System: List Price, $35
The Best Joomla! Tutorial Ever!: List Price, $19.95


 
Four Hundred Stuff
Oracle Drops MySQL Support for IBM i

ASNA Splits from BluePhoenix

IBM i Vendors to Watch in 2011

Oracle Says JDE 'Blue Stack' Withdrawal No Big Deal

Linoma Adds Function to Multi-Tool

Four Hundred Guru
Implementing Binary Trees in RPG

Closing the Gaps

Admin Alert: Basic i/OS Error Monitoring and Response, Part 2

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

System i PTF Guide
September 25, 2010: Volume 12, Number 39

September 18, 2010: Volume 12, Number 38

September 11, 2010: Volume 12, Number 37

September 4, 2010: Volume 12, Number 36

August 28, 2010: Volume 12, Number 35

August 21, 2010: Volume 12, Number 34

TPM at The Register
Watson beats humans in Jeopardy! dry run

Intel: Our server growth never stops

Penguin goes hybrid with ClusterWare

Perot Systems top dog exits Dell

Embotics delays Microsoft Hyper-V support

Without Meyer, what will AMD do next?

Supercomputer boffins warm to clouds

Rackspace accelerates clouds with Akamai

IBM's mainframe-blade hybrid to do Windows

Uncle Sam bankrolls Cray XT6m deal

Intel shells out $1.5bn for Nvidia tech

Tech giants score record patent stash

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

ProData Computer Services
Help/Systems
Bug Busters Software Engineering
SkyView Partners
RJS Software Systems


Printer Friendly Version


TABLE OF CONTENTS
i5/OS and IBM i Support: How Long Does It Last?

Going Full Spiral, Not Coming Full Circle

Lotusphere Coming into View; Social Business Looms Big

Mad Dog 21/21: Something Wiki This Way Comes

IT Spending Curves Upward, Salaries Show Sign of Life

But Wait, There's More:

Reader Feedback on The Carrot: i5/OS V5R4 Gets Execution Stay Until May . . . U.S. Regains Top Global Patent Holder Title, IBM Leads the Pack . . . Humans $4,600, Watson $4,400 in Jeopardy! Beta Test Round . . . Rimini Street Says Third Party Support Biz Is Booming . . . Rising Spending Tide Finally Raises the SAP Boat . . .

The Four Hundred

BACK ISSUES




 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2011 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement