• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • IBM Cuts Core And Memory Pricing On Entry Power Iron

    November 14, 2016 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    We are always trying to get IBM to do more to promote the IBM i platform and the Power Systems hardware that comprises the physical part of that platform. In days gone by, Big Blue used to make very public and loud pronouncements regarding its ability to bring customers more value for the dollar, often above and beyond the Moore’s Law capacity increases that are just part of the chip business and usually at the tail end of the product cycle as we are now with the Power8 machines that have been shipping since April 2014.

    IBM is not as vocal as it used to be, but that does not mean it is not wheeling and dealing, and we have caught wind of a special promotion aimed at Power Systems customers that, like other changes that were part of the October 11 announcements where memory and disk pricing was reduced on certain systems, will go a ways into making the current Power8 iron appealing to IBM i shops and their AIX and Linux shop brothers and sisters.

    We learned of the Double Up Core and Memory promotion from some business partners, and as it turns out, this deal went into effect back on September 14, precisely two months ago. (We would have told you earlier, but we didn’t know about it.) The deal was buried in a presentation for business partners peddling Power Systems iron, thus:

    The deal to offer double the cores and double the memory on entry–what IBM calls scale out–Power Systems machines was a bit vague, but intriguing, so we did a little more hunting and came across this:

    An RPQ, if you are not acquainted with the IT vendor lingo, is a Request for Price Quote and it usually relates to a special modification on an existing system in the vendor’s catalog. IBM also has what it called PRPQs, short for Programming Request For  Price Quote additions to the catalog, which is for special tweaks to the operating system, database, or other systems software (such as making the database scale across more cores than in the standard release, to give one example). The thing about RPQs and PRPQs is that they do not have the normal announcement process and you have to know something is there to know you are eligible for it. It is something that the business partner trying to close the deal can whip out to sweeten the deal, but the customer doesn’t know is something anyone could get if they just knew about it and had the reseller acquire the hardware or the software modification under these special rules.

    As you can see, IBM has two different RPQ deals, one aimed at the single-socket, four-core Power S814 server and another based on the variant of the Power S814 that supports six cores. With the four-core system, IBM is tossing in two cores and 32 GB of memory for free. The processor card, feature EXP0, which has a Power8 chip running at 3.03 GHz, costs $1,940 on this machine, as we detailed when it launched back in June 2014, and processor activations cost $360 a pop. A 16 GB memory feature code (which is a pair of 8 GB sticks) on the Power S814 costs $1,250 using DDR3 memory, and we presume IBM wants to unload this older memory now that it has new DDR4 memory available in the Power Systems iron. So the aggregate value of the deal is $1,970. Against a machine that might cost $20,000, that works out to a 10 percent discount, and when you toss in cheaper disk storage, the cost can come down further. We wish IBM would offer discounts on IBM i itself and do everything in its power to get customers of the IBM i midrange platform all on a current 7.X release of the software stack.

    On the six-core Power S814 machine, the processor card and the core activations cost the same per unit, and so does the memory. (The clock speed on the processor is the same at 3.03 GHz, too.) So the value of the Double Up Memory and Cores RPQ deal is $3,850, and probably around the same 10 percent discount off a configured (and yet beefier) system.

    The freebie memory and cores are not, by the way, available on the eight-core variant of the Power S814 system. That machine’s processor card costs $4,790, way more expensive than the lower bin four-core and six-core parts. The cores on this feature EXP6 processor card also spin at 3.72 GHz, which makes the underlying card and the cores more valuable. But the price hike is a lot more than the incremental performance. Core activations on the eight-core processor cost twice as much, at $720 a pop. The memory costs the same. So if IBM did have a deal for the eight-core Power S814 machine, it would deliver eight cores and 128 GB of memory. Presuming this machine was configured with two 64 GB memory features, the value of four free cores would be $2,880 and the value of 64 GB of memory would be $4,250, for a grand total of $7,130. But again, IBM is not offering such an RPQ deal.

    Maybe you can have IBM craft you an iRPQ? That’s for an individual RPQ, one made just for you.

     

    RELATED STORIES

    Sundry Fall Power Systems Peripheral Enhancements

    IBM’s Power Systems Stalls A Bit As Power8 Wanes

    The Deal The Power 850C Implies For IBM i Shops

    IBM Prepping For October Power Systems Push

    Private Big Iron Power8 Clouds To Puff Up With IBM i

    IBM Opens Up Coherent Protocols For Power Chips

    New OpenPower Servers Present Interesting IBM i Possibilities

    The Prospects For A Power9 Revolution

    Sundry April Power Systems Announcements

    Is There No Midrange In The IBM i Midrange?

    Thoughts On The Power E850 And I/O Contraction

    Power9 Gets Ready To Roll In Systems In 2017

    The Prospects For A Power9 Revolution

    At The End Of The Power8 Long Tail

    Power Systems GM Weighs In On AS/400 Birthday

    IBM Puts Future Power Chip Stakes In The Ground

    Power Systems Turns In A Full Year Of Growth

    Power Systems Shows Growth Again For Big Blue

    Can OpenPower Take A Bite Out Of The Datacenter?

    Taking The Power Systems Pulse With GM Doug Balog

    Reader Feedback On A Hypothetical Future IBM i System

    A Hypothetical Future IBM i System

    What Will IBM i Do With A Power10 Processor?

    The IBM i Market Is Not Economics 101

    New Power8 Midrange, PurePower Kicker To PureSystems

    IBM Upgrades High-End And Low-End Power8 Machines

    The Remaining Power8 Systems Loom

    OpenPower Could Take IBM i To Hyperscale And Beyond

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags:

    Sponsored by
    Maxava

    Migrate IBM i with Confidence

    Tired of costly and risky migrations? Maxava Migrate Live minimizes disruption with seamless transitions. Upgrading to Power10 or cloud hosted system, Maxava has you covered!

    Learn More

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Sponsored Links

    Profound Logic Software:  NOW ON DEMAND! Webinar: Agile Modernization with Node.js. Fresche:  IBM i staffing for all of your IT needs. Request a FREE estimate. 1-800-361-6782 Chrono-Logic:  Simplify deployment with LANSA-based Change Management and Deployment solutions.

    Cybersecurity Is Hot, But Don’t Overlook Physical Security Calling SQL Functions From RPG, A Service Program

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Volume 26, Number 50 -- November 14, 2016
THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

Profound Logic Software
Maxava
Chrono-Logic
Computer Keyes
Baseline Data Services

Table of Contents

  • IBM Cuts Core And Memory Pricing On Entry Power Iron
  • Vulnerabilities In 3DES Encryption Put It Out To Pasture In IBM i
  • IBM i Shops Do Less To Get More Done
  • Mad Dog 21/21: Of Possible Interest
  • You’re Hired! Finding Your Next IBM i Pro

Content archive

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

Recent Posts

  • Public Preview For Watson Code Assistant for i Available Soon
  • COMMON Youth Movement Continues at POWERUp 2025
  • IBM Preserves Memory Investments Across Power10 And Power11
  • Eradani Uses AI For New EDI And API Service
  • Picking Apart IBM’s $150 Billion In US Manufacturing And R&D
  • FAX/400 And CICS For i Are Dead. What Will IBM Kill Next?
  • Fresche Overhauls X-Analysis With Web UI, AI Smarts
  • Is It Time To Add The Rust Programming Language To IBM i?
  • Is IBM Going To Raise Prices On Power10 Expert Care?
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 20

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