Hewlett-Packard's first low-power server for
hyperscale computing environments, developed under a project it calls
Moonshot, will go on sale next quarter, CEO Meg Whitman said on
Thursday.
Project Moonshot is an effort to build low-power servers based on
alternatives to Intel's Xeon processors for use in mega data centers
like those operated by Facebook and Google.
HP announced the project in 2011, and the first server platform it talked about, known as Redstone, was to be based on an ARM-type processor from Calxeda.
HP switched gears last year, however, and showed another Project Moonshot server design dubbed Gemini, the first version of which was to be based on an Intel Atom processor.
It could be that Atom server that HP plans to release next
quarter, though Whitman didn't say and an HP spokesman declined to
comment. The server would be a bit behind schedule, since an HP
executive originally said Gemini would be out late last year.
"We expect this to truly revolutionize the economics of the data
center with an entirely new category of server that consumes up to 89
percent less energy, 94 percent less space and 63 percent less cost than
a traditional x86 server environment," Whitman said on HP's earnings call Thursday.
It's HP's attempt to capitalize on a growing market for very
low-power servers used by companies delivering online services on a
large scale. Other players include Dell, which was quick to jump on the
market, and AMD, which bought low-power server vendor SeaMicro and plans
to license its technology to other computer makers.
The servers aren't designed to run traditional enterprise
applications, however. They're intended for programs written specially
for such environments, including Web applications and big data software
such as Hadoop.
Gemini gets its power savings from a new Intel Atom chip known as
Centerton, which Intel has said consumes 6 watts of power, far less
than its Xeon chips. Calxeda isn't necessarily out in the cold, however:
HP said Gemini uses a "processor cartridge" that will allow it to use
other processor types in the future.
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