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Wednesday, 10/16/2002 8:57:15 PM

Wednesday, October 16, 2002 8:57:15 PM

Post# of 151694
HP Upgrades ProLiant Servers

Xeon will power new models, including one featuring the next generation of the CPU.

Ashlee Vance, IDG News Service
Wednesday, October 16, 2002

Hewlett-Packard has added a pair of new servers to its ProLiant line, as the company upgrades some of the key technology gained through its acquisition of Compaq.

HP is adding a new two-processor ProLiant model and a new four-processor ProLiant model to its arsenal. Both systems will use Intel's Xeon processor.

The dual-processor ProLiant DL380 rack-mount server has started shipping with 2.4-GHz and 2.8-GHz Xeon chips available, according to HP's Web site. HP will wait until Intel brings out its next-generation Xeon chip--code-named Gallatin--to release the four-processor ProLiant ML570 system, the company said in a Tuesday statement.

The ProLiant DL380 is targeted at customers looking for a compact system to handle file and print serving, mail serving, or Web hosting tasks. This Xeon-based server should provide a performance boost over its predecessors based on the Pentium III processor. A ProLiant DL380 with two 2.8-GHz Xeon chips, 512MB of memory and an 18GB hard drive is priced at $5317, according to Hewlett-Packard.

The beefier ProLiant ML570 server will ship with several high-end features designed to provide users with better management and performance functions, according to the statement.

Next-Gen Xeon
The Gallatin processor will arrive by the end of 2002, as Intel's first server chip built with a 0.13-micron manufacturing process and designed for multiprocessor systems, Intel has said.

HP pointed out its quick adoption of Intel's latest chip technology as proof that HP plans to extend Compaq's success with ProLiant servers. HP executives championed the ProLiant systems as a major technology win when the company completed its acquisition of Compaq earlier this year.

Before the merger, HP was losing ground in the Intel-based server market, facing fierce competition from Compaq, Dell Computer, and IBM.

HP said the new system could boost performance on database and business applications over its current ProLiant servers in this class by up to 80 percent. The company attributed most of these gains to the larger cache size and higher clock speed expected from the Gallatin processor, according to the statement. Users will also be able to upgrade memory without shutting the server down.



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