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TFH
OS/400 Edition
Volume 12, Number 30 -- August 4, 2003

IBM Serves Up 'Blue Ice' Packaging for Linux Across eServers


by Timothy Prickett Morgan

Two years ago, when IBM caught the Linux bug real bad, it promised to get the open source Linux operating system running on all of its platforms, to get its core middleware and databases running on it, and use Linux as a kind of common glue holding the disparate eServer family of incompatible products together. With the "Blue Ice" Integrated Platform for eBusiness, which will soon be available on the iSeries, IBM is making good on this promise.

With Blue Ice, IBM has put forth the blueprints, methodologies, and tools that show customers and resellers how to implement Linux on all of its eServers. Blue Ice also gives them installation scripts that can cut down the installation of infrastructure servers by as much as 75 percent.

Blue Ice was rolled out on IBM's xSeries Intel-based server platform in May 2002. This was a natural enough place to start, since X86 servers accounted for then (and still do) the largest number of IBM's Linux server shipments. But being a member of the eServer family means getting all the same goodies, so in January 2003, IBM rolled it out on the zSeries mainframes, which run Linux in logical partitions. Last week, at the LinuxWorld trade show in San Francisco, IBM showed off the Blue Ice offering on its pSeries RISC/Unix servers as well as on the iSeries OS/400 servers. The entry pSeries machines can support Linux as a sole operating system if customers want that, and all modern pSeries boxes based on Power4 or Power4+ processors can support Linux within logical partitions. IBM's iSeries line can support Linux in logical partitions on machines that use the S-Star or I-Star PowerPC processors or the Power4 processors. IBM's BladeCenter servers and its new eServer 325 Opteron-based servers do not fall into these categories, but Blue Ice is for them, too.

But just because an eServer machine supports Linux doesn't mean it is easy for IBM's channel partners to push it. Many of IBM's resellers have deep expertise on Windows, Unix, OS/400, or the MVS family of operating systems, and know very little about Linux. And they don't have time to learn. So IBM is going to make it easier for them.

Blue Ice is a set of presized, prearchitected Linux solutions that tell IBM's eServer resellers what they need to do to get Web, mail, database, firewall and WebSphere middleware servers running on Linux instances on any eServer, and gives them the tools, scripts, and sizing guides to automate such installations. On the iSeries, IBM is implementing Blue Ice starting this week on the two-way Model 810 and six-way Model 825 machines, which are the sweet spot for sales these days. On the pSeries, Blue Ice is being rolled out on the four-way pSeries 630 and eight-way pSeries 650 machines, which are slightly more powerful, but which represent the sweet spot in IBM's pSeries line. The rollout of Blue Ice was contingent on the delivery of versions of IBM's WebSphere application server and DB2 database running on Linux for the IBM's 64-bit Power processors. This software has been available on the xSeries for quite some time.

In addition to rolling out support for the pSeries and iSeries in the Blue Ice program, IBM has also revamped Blue Ice for the mainframe. On the zSeries, Blue Ice supports updated versions of Linux and the z/VM virtual machine operating system that IBM uses to create Linux partitions on its mainframes. IBM is also rolling out support for its WebSphere middleware and DB2 database running in Linux partitions on the zSeries machines. In addition, IBM's "Shark" disk arrays and "T-Rex" zSeries 990 servers can be part of a Blue Ice mainframe setup.

IBM and its partners will start using Blue Ice on the iSeries and pSeries machines beginning September 8. The updated Blue Ice for zSeries machines will be ready August 29.

Sources at IBM say that the Blue Ice scripts that were written for the iSeries Model 810 and 825 servers can, in theory, be implemented on other iSeries machines. IBM has two Custom Technology Centers--one in the US and one in Europe--that will work with partners to deliver Blue Ice scripts on other iSeries servers if customers want it. IBM is also offering planning and services related to Blue Ice for a couple grand, and will actually do a Blue Ice installation at the normal fee of a few hundred bucks an hour if that is what a customer wants. The vouchers that come with OS/400 Enterprise Edition can pay for the Blue Ice planning and implementation services at customer sites. You can contact the Custom Technology Center at ctc@us.ibm.com .


Sponsored By
FAST400

What makes IBM different from Microsoft regarding Fast400??

What is Fast400?

You are hearing a lot about Fast400 aren't you? But what is Fast400? Fast400 is a "tuning" product for the iSeries. Fast400 will allow an iSeries server to utilize the available CPW for interactive processing. IBM would have you believe that these interactive cards that cost thousands to millions of dollars, actually add value to your server. By buying Fast400, you do not ever need to buy another interactive card for your iSeries. For a free demonstration of Fast400, please visit www.fast400.net.

Why Fast400?

A few years ago Microsoft would not let other software companies build tools to work with the Windows operating system. Microsoft did all kinds of scurrilous things to stop other manufacturers' software from working on their platform. They would put code in the base operating system that prevented other companies code from working properly. IBM even had these issues with Operations Navigator. In the early days of Operations Navigator, the developers in Rochester had to scrap early versions because Microsoft did not want IBM leverage on what was proprietary to them. Netscape also had a few problems using the Windows operating system.

The result

Now we all know what happened to Microsoft. After spending tens of millions of our tax dollars in the trial, the US government told Microsoft that they were acting as a monopoly and what they did was not right or fair.

The similarity

IBM is doing exactly the same thing to Fast400 as Microsoft did. IBM has changed the operating system of the iSeries 400 to prevent Fast400 from working. In fact this has been done several times now, and each time the Fast400 developers produce a new fix to circumvent the IBM action. Why does IBM do this? because Fast400 takes money out of IBM's pocket. The potential for IBM to make billions from its user base, for delivering virtually no product is tantamount to corporate deception! Did IBM change the operating system when EMC introduced a low cost storage solution for the iSeries?

The future

The cat and mouse game between IBM and Fast400 is already a year old. Every time IBM changes the operating system to disable Fast400, the developers of Fast400 produce a new version within days to enable it again. Does Fast400 have a commercial agenda? Of course it does. Fast400 is in business to provide its clients with added benefits, which will maximise the interactive performance of iSeries 400 servers. And as we are a business, why shouldn't we charge a nominal fee for that service? A fee that our clients see as being fair and proper. After all, it's not Fast400 that is making enemies in the user base. As long as IBM wants to play "David and Goliath" we will continue to "out" the giant. Fast400 is not running, you can be assured!!

For more information, please visit www.fast400.net.


THIS ISSUE
SPONSORED BY:

Aldon Computer Group
FAST400
BCD Int'l
iTera
Affirmative Computer
S4i Systems


BACK ISSUES

TABLE OF
CONTENTS
IDC Makes the Case for iSeries Wintel-Lintel Server Consolidation

IBM Serves Up 'Blue Ice' Packaging for Linux Across eServers

IBM Gives iTera and MaxAv Entry into New VAE Program

Admin Alert: When Antivirus Tools Interfere with Software Installation

Mad Dog 21/21: Blocking the Sewers of Cyberspace

But Wait, There's More


Editor
Timothy Prickett Morgan

Managing Editor
Shannon Pastore

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

Publisher and
Advertising Director:

Jenny Thomas

Advertising Sales Representative
Kim Reed

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


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