• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • IBM Italy Helps Push Power Systems Gear With Rebate Deals

    January 28, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    Last week in The Four Hundred, I told you about a deal that IBM was offering in Europe to Power Systems resellers who peddled ISV software on top of the systems. As it turns out, IBM Italy has another similar deal aimed at getting customers to upgrade to new Power Systems machines using Power7 processors, and in one special case, a Power6+ server.

    In announcement letter ZA132-1014, which was announced on January 15 and then amended on January 23 (when I actually saw it pop up in the increasingly crazy IBM announcement database), IBM is offering rebates to customers who are replacing vintage Power iron (in either the OS/400-i side of the box or the AIX side) rebates if they buy new Power7 machinery or in some cases even Power 520 machines based on the Power6+ processor. The rebate scales depending on the size of the new machine you buy, from a low of €1,000 on a Power 520 (with one core) and a Power 710 or 720 with four cores to a high of €4,500 on a Power 750.

    Like many other deals that IBM does, the rebate in the Italian deal is based on taking out an old AS/400 or RS/6000 box (or their progeny) running PowerPC, Power2, Power3, Power4, Power5, Power5+, Power6, and even Power6+ iron. Hewlett-Packard‘s HP 9000 and Integrity servers, Sun Microsystems Sun Fire and Netra machines (which predate the Oracle acquisition three years ago) as well as some Fujitsu Sparc Enterprises boxes that were resold by Sun and Oracle can be taken out under the deal; so can Fujitsu Primergy X86 and PrimeQuest Itanium boxes.

    This is the normal shape of the deal from IBM. But there is an interesting twist. If a solution provider in Italy is peddling a new box to a new customer, they can also submit paperwork to get the rebate as well, and the partner is expected to pass the rebate on to the new customer. In this case, IBM Italy is offering up three machines that can take advantage of the deal, with their own rebates. If partners peddle a Power 520 with a single core–which is a very popular box in Europe and which is still in stock at distributors–and if it is running IBM i, then IBM will fork over €1,500. If newbies get a Power 710 or Power 720, then IBM will shell out €3,000, which is considerably more than it is offering existing customers or those replacing competitive gear.

    Although this Italian deal was announced on January 15, it is retroactive to January 1. It runs out on March 31.

    And if you are doing a deal anywhere else on Earth, you need to do two things. The first is to get your hands on the Power7+ announcements, and the second is to insist on the same deal as companies in Italy are being given. Unless, of course, IBM or one of its resellers is already giving you a better deal.

    RELATED STORIES

    IBM Europe Gives Rebates To Power Resellers Who Push ISV Wares

    IBM Doubles Up Rebates On Power Systems Trade-In Deal

    IBM Extends And Tweaks Power Systems Deal In Europe

    IBM Offers PureFlex Power-X86 Deal Down Under

    IBM Gives Killer Power System Deals Down Under

    IBM Says No Passing On Power Systems Rebates To Someone Else

    Big Blue Boosts Trade-Ins For Power 770 Deal

    Nips And Tucks For IBM Power Systems Trade-In Rebate Deal

    IBM Tweaks Power Systems Rebate Deals Once Again

    IBM Offers Zero Percent Financing On Power Systems, Storage

    Old Gear Gets The Ax In More Power Systems Trade-In Deals



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

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags:

    Sponsored by
    DRV Tech

    Get More Out of Your IBM i

    With soaring costs, operational data is more critical than ever. IBM shops need faster, easier ways to distribute IBM applications-based data to users more efficiently, no matter where they are.

    The Problem:

    For Users, IBM Data Can Be Difficult to Get To

    IBM Applications generate reports as spooled files, originally designed to be printed. Often those reports are packed together with so much data it makes them difficult to read. Add to that hardcopy is a pain to distribute. User-friendly formats like Excel and PDF are better, offering sorting, searching, and easy portability but getting IBM reports into these formats can be tricky without the right tools.

    The Solution:

    IBM i Reports can easily be converted to easy to read and share formats like Excel and PDF and Delivered by Email

    Converting IBM i, iSeries, and AS400 reports into Excel and PDF is now a lot easier with SpoolFlex software by DRV Tech.  If you or your users are still doing this manually, think how much time is wasted dragging and reformatting to make a report readable. How much time would be saved if they were automatically formatted correctly and delivered to one or multiple recipients.

    SpoolFlex converts spooled files to Excel and PDF, automatically emailing them, and saving copies to network shared folders. SpoolFlex converts complex reports to Excel, removing unwanted headers, splitting large reports out for individual recipients, and delivering to users whether they are at the office or working from home.

    Watch our 2-minute video and see DRV’s powerful SpoolFlex software can solve your file conversion challenges.

    Watch Video

    DRV Tech

    www.drvtech.com

    866.378.3366

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    New Java Vulnerabilities No Threat To IBM i Pondering Possibilities With More Power7+ Machines Impending

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Volume 23, Number 4 -- January 28, 2013
THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

Maxava
Help/Systems
United Computer Group, Inc.
Computer Keyes
WorksRight Software

Table of Contents

  • Coming Soon: Entry And Midrange Power7+ Servers
  • IBM Mainframes Jump, Power Systems Drop Ahead Of Power7+ Rollout
  • Simple Business Intelligence: Fact Or Phantom?
  • As I See It: Gadfly
  • Survey Points To 3 Percent Raise For IT Pros In 2013
  • IBM Italy Helps Push Power Systems Gear With Rebate Deals
  • Avnet Saw IT Budget Flush Spending As 2012 Came To A Close
  • Execs Say New ‘Digital’ Tech Tops The Priority List This Year
  • Connect 2013 (Lotusphere) Opens; Streaming Video Available
  • Pure Systems Customer Count Breaks 2,300 While Power Takeouts Continue

Content archive

  • The Four Hundred
  • Four Hundred Stuff
  • Four Hundred Guru

Recent Posts

  • The Turning Point For Power Systems Is Here, And Now
  • How IBM i Users Can Compete In The Digital Era With Composable Commerce
  • IBM Streamlines Data Migration With New Partition Mirror Tech
  • Profound Logic Adds MCP To IBM i AI Tool
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 29
  • Power11 Entry Machines: The Power S1124 And Power L1124
  • BRMS Isn’t The Only Backup Product With A Security Problem
  • Guru: A Faster Way To Sign A JWT
  • Maxis Adds IBM i Support To Database Modernization Tool
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 28

Subscribe

To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Contributors
  • Four Hundred Monitor
  • IBM i PTF Guide
  • Media Kit
  • Subscribe

Search

Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle