Advertisement

Sun Rounds Out Its Intel Offerings

In addition to new rack-mounted servers and blades, Sun is now offering an Intel-based workstation.

Sun Microsystems is rounding out its portfolio of Intel-based products.

On Oct. 23, the Santa Clara, Calif., company will roll out the Sun Ultra 24 workstation, the first of its workstations to use Intel microprocessors. Sun already offers workstations that use its own SPARC processors as well as a line of workstations based on chips from Advanced Micro Devices.

Since announcing an agreement with Intel earlier this year, Sun has been rolling out blade systems and rack-mounted servers based on Intel architecture. These moves will enable Sun to complete against similar offerings from Dell and Hewlett-Packard, both in terms of technology and price.

"From a very simple standpoint, it is all about survivability," said Charles King, an analyst with Pund-IT Research. "Sun is simply adapting to the needs of its customers, and many of these customers do not need the horsepower that Sun provided through a proprietary technology like SPARC. Now, the company can use a commodity processor like Intel and get the same type of performance and graphics ability that Sun offered with its SPARC-based workstations."

In terms of price and configurations, the Ultra 24 workstation starts at about $995, which is comparable to Dell's T3400 workstation, which debuted earlier this month for a base price of about $1,000. Both the Sun and the Dell workstations offer the same set of Intel Core 2 Duo processor options, along with Intel's new X38 Express chip set and Nvidia's Quadro FX graphics cards. Both also offer the same amount of RAM—a maximum of 8GB—as well as four hard disk drive slots that support both SATA (Serial ATA) and SAS (serial-attached SCSI) hard drives.

PointerRead more here about the Dell T3400 workstation.

A key difference between the two is that the Dell T3400 offers Red Hat Linux, Microsoft Windows XP and Vista as the operating system options. Sun goes a step further by offering those operating system options as well as its own Solaris 10 OS and Novell's SUSE Linux.

eWEEK.com Special Report: State of the Desktop

Brian Healy, a workstation group marketing manager at Sun, said the company plans to sell the Ultra 24 workstation to what he called the "hard-core technical market" customers, such as ISVs, as well as to those involved in CAD work and the company's traditional vertical market customers, such as oil and gas companies and the financial services sector. While Sun built part of its business by engineering and building power workstations based on SPARC processors, Healy said the Intel-based machines now offer the customers some additional choices.

"Some of our customers are tied into Intel infrastructure, and by offering this workstation we are allowing them to buy a machine that fits in with that existing infrastructure," Healy said. "When you look at the market, Intel has the dominant market share. By not having that workstation with an Intel processor, we had a gap in our portfolio."

The Sun Ultra 24 workstation is available immediately.

PointerCheck out eWEEK.com's Desktops & Notebooks Center for the latest news in desktop and notebook computing.



Comment on this article
Comment Now  |  SPARC is not proprietary by anonymous, 10/24/2007 1:41:12 AM

You really need to challenge statements like:

"Sun is simply adapting to the needs of its customers, and many of these customers do not need the horsepower that Sun provided through a proprietary technology like SPARC. Now, the company can use a commodity processor like Intel and get the same type of performance and graphics ability that Sun offered with its SPARC-based workstations."

SPARC is actually one of the very few open cpus around. There is a difference be...


Read More ###  |  Reply to this Comment  |  Report Abuse

Commentary
Looking to grow IT's role in business? Looking to equip IT with the tools to make a difference? The time has come to for solution providers to increase the importance of IT.
Opinion: Margins will drop quickly on managed services, and VARs need to stay two steps ahead to keep up.
ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE E-MAIL NEWSLETTERS bring you reliable, timely information to stay on top of the business of technology -- and technology in business -- and get more out of the Web.
RSS SUBSCRIPTIONS
XML
Add Channel News, Product Reviews, Trends and Analysis to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo!
Advertisement
CHANNEL RESOURCE CENTER

CA IT Management Exchange provides information on IT governance, business service management and security management, with an emphasis on educating CIOs and other IT leaders on how to use a portfolio of services to maximize business value Find the latest news, and tools at this comprehensive performance information hub. Visit Now >>

Learn more about digital infrastructure with latest news, information and resources on security (SMTP authentication, spam, phishing), communications (VoIP, mobile commerce, real-time web), and internet services (DNS, RFID, DRM tools).  
Visit Now >>
HP is an innovator when it comes to energy efficient storage solutions. Learn how HP can help cut costs and deliver effective results for your business. Visit the HP Storage Room today to access the latest white papers and features. Visit Now >>
FEATURED CONTENT
Web Buyer's Guide Resource Center
The Web Buyer's Guide is your best source for white papers on a wide range of IT products and services.

This Week's Featured White Papers: