IBM's PureSystems celebrates its first birthday April 11. A year ago, IBM
officials announced what they said was a major step forward in a
simpler era of computing, introducing a new category of "expert
integrated systems." Observers and IBM insiders said the PureSystems
represented as big a move for the company as when it introduced the
mainframe 50 years ago. Ambuj Goyal, general manager of development in
IBM's Systems and Technology Group, told eWEEK the new family of systems
is the first with built-in expertise based on IBM's decades of
experience running IT operations for tens of thousands of clients in 170
countries. The PureSystems were the result of $2 billion in R&D and
acquisitions over four years, an unprecedented move by IBM to integrate
all IT elements, both physical and virtual. The acquisitions included Platform Computing and Blade Network Technologies.
"From an IBM perspective, in my lifetime, I have not seen so much of
IBM all behind one thing with software, hardware and services; it's like
50 years ago when we announced the mainframe," Goyal said. "In many
ways, it is as big as that, but designed for a different world." That
was April 2012. Now the PureSystems are out in the wild working hard for
IBM clients. Here, eWEEK takes a look at how the systems are being
used.
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