tfh
Volume 20, Number 29 -- August 22, 2011

IBM Cuts BNT Switch Tags, Adds Fibre Channel SAN Switches

Published: August 22, 2011

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

As a long-time IBM customer, you are probably not used to the fact that there is an IBM System Networking division that sells data center and storage switches. And as a really long time IBM customer, as many AS/400 shops certainly are, you are probably wondering why the hell Big Blue sold off its networking business to Cisco Systems in 1999 and basically gave the company a decade of high margins.

No matter. IBM has acquired and partnered to build up its own portfolio of switching products, and the company is eager to dislodge the incumbents whose switches are on Big Blue server turf. Last week, in announcement letter 311-114, IBM cut the price tag on the Blade Network Technologies RackSwitch G8052R (product number 1455-48E) top-of-rack switch. IBM announced three different RackSwitches back in April, and this 48-port model is one of them. This particular model has 48 Gigabit Ethernet ports and four 10 Gigabit Ethernet ports, which can be used for uplinks or to link to servers. It used to cost $10,999, but now IBM has cut the tag on this box by 18.5 percent to $8,999.

IBM has not cut the tags on the "real" 10 Gigabit Ethernet switches announced in April--the 24-port G124ER and the 48-port G8264R, which also has four 40 Gigabit Ethernet ports for additional 10 Gigabit Ethernet connectivity to servers using splitter cables or to be used as uplinks to end-of-row or core switches.

Now here's the strange bit. IBM had already cut the price on the RackSwitch G58052R and G8052F when acquired through its online store in announcement letter 311-101, saying it would give customers who bought them online the switches for $5,500, a 38.5 percent price cut over what IBM said was the $8,949 list price on these two units out there on the Intertubes. The old discount deal from IBM that came out in July is still the better deal, obviously.

Go figure. I just report what IT vendors do and don't do--I don't take responsibility for it.

IBM last week also announced two SAN backbone switches supporting 16Gb/sec connectivity out to storage as well as a new SAN switch for linking. These three devices are very serious storage switches aimed at very high-end customers that are building large-scale clusters and clouds. The System Storage SAN768B-2 is a modular chassis switch with 384 ports running at that very high speed, while the SAN384B-2 has 192 ports; they also sport 10 Gb/sec Ethernet ports for metro-level connectivity between data centers. (Prior modular Fibre Channel blades ran at 8 Gb/sec and thus the product names and port counts made sense.) The SAN48B-5 is a 1U rack-mounted, fixed port Fibre Channel switch that has 48 ports running at the 16 Gb/sec Fibre Channel speed. These three switches are backwards compatible with earlier and slower Fibre Channel devices, all the way back to 2 Gb/sec devices from the dawn of time.


RELATED STORIES

IBM Has A Fire Sale on BNT Rack Switches

IBM Buys Blade Network to Control Ethernet Switches

IBM Cuts Deals on Selected Network Switches

Intelliden Snapped Up by IBM for Network Management

Hewlett-Packard Eats 3Com for $2.7 Billion

Cisco to Make Nexus Converged Switches for Blades

IBM Bundles RAID into BladeCenter S i Edition, Adds Lots of Networking

The Data Center Is the Computer



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


Sponsored By
HELP/SYSTEMS

In today's security-conscious world, backing up IBM i data
and storing it in a secure vault may not be enough.

Companies must comply with numerous regulations for storing
and transferring confidential information.
And, the amount of data is increasing every day.

How do you ensure that your data is protected?

Follow this link to learn how encrypting critical data
can help you with today's data security requirements.


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

PowerTech:  2011 Security Event of the Year. September 22–23 in Las Vegas. RVSP today!
New Generation Software:  FREE Webinar. Getting results with NGS-IQ reporting and BI. August 24
Townsend Security:  View the recorded Webcast: Secure Managed File Transfers for the IBM i

 

 

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
IBM Goes Dojo with HATS V8

Open Source CMS No Stranger on IBM i

Application Modernization Priorities Meet Simple Solutions

Magic Spreads Native .NET with uniPaaS 2.0

Tally Offers Replacement for Withdrawn InfoPrint Printer

Four Hundred Guru
Adobe Flash Builder for the iSeries Programmer, Part 1

ILE: Decisions, Decisions, Part 2

Admin Alert: An Alternate Way to Port Image Catalogs Between Systems: QFileSrv.400

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
Apotheker prescribes transformation elixir for HP

Canonical ARMs Ubuntu for microserver wars

DARPA shells out $21m for IBM cat brain chip

Red Hat beta revs KVM hypervisor to 3.0

Dell retools for the midmarket

Cloud box does virtualization sans SAN

ScaleBase shatters MySQL for scalability

SGI slurps OpenFoam

Xsigo automagically floats cloud east and west

Nvidia enlists Cray CTO for Tesla GPU assault

SuperVisor: One hypervisor to virtualize them all

Skytap adds orchestration to dev/test cloud

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

Maxava
Help/Systems
Townsend Security
inFORM Decisions
Twin Data Corporation


Printer Friendly Version


TABLE OF CONTENTS
More Details Emerge on Future Power7+ and Power8 Chips

IBM Taps Software Exec For Power Systems Marketing

EnterpriseDB Sets Sights on Oracle's MySQL

As I See It: Paying Attention

Mad Dog 21/21: How To Downgrade Your Business Partner

But Wait, There's More:

Big Blue Tweaks Red Hat Deal for Power Systems . . . IBM Cuts BNT Switch Tags, Adds Fibre Channel SAN Switches . . . Services Power Jack Henry to Record Revenues in Fiscal 2011 . . . Kronos Sells Lots of HR Software On Premise and In Its Cloud . . . Status Update: Sick and Tired of Social Media . . .

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