September 02, 2008

HP launches product blitz for virtualization

The products include a ProLiant blade server specialized for virtualization, four thin-client computers, new equipment for virtualizing storage, and consulting services

Hewlett-Packard has announced a broad sweep of new virtualization products along with survey results claiming that most businesses aren't making the most of what the technology has to offer.

The products include a ProLiant blade server "built from the ground up" for virtualization, four thin-client computers for virtualizing desktops, new equipment for virtualizing storage and some consulting services.

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Virtualization is most widely used today for consolidating servers in data centers, which can help cut costs and reduce energy use. HP is trying to sell the technology as a way to make businesses more competitive, by freeing up IT resources that can be repurposed quickly to create new services.

"Today, many companies are focused only on how virtualization reduces cost; we believe it enables much more," said Ann Livermore, head of HP's Technology Solutions Group, in a video on HP's Web site.

On the desktop, HP is trying to push virtualization beyond call centers and into offices, for use by business analysts, engineers and even financial traders. It announced four thin-client PCs that will ship in October, two with its ThinConnect operating system, one with Windows CE and one with Windows XP Embedded.

It also announced that its VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure) software and blade PCs now support Citrix Systems' XenDesktop software, which was announced in May. VDI lets a company run multiple desktop OS environments on a server and is geared toward "basic productivity workers." HP also offers blade PCs, which use a dedicated server blade for each desktop environment, for workers who need more compute power.

The thin clients cost about $199 each when bought in volume, and each blade PC works out to about $1,000, said Tad Bodeman, director of product marketing for HP's client virtualization business.

"All of these cost the same or a bit more to buy than a desktop PC, but very quickly you'll have a return on the investment," Bodeman said. The savings come from lower management costs for centrally managed virtual desktops, a longer lifecycle for the thin-client hardware -- up to seven years compared to five years for a standard desktop -- and fewer incidents of lost or stolen data because the data is stored on a central server. Thin clients also consume less energy -- around 25 watts compared to 100 watts or more for a desktop PC.

For the data center, HP said its new BL495c blade server is built for virtualization because it has 16 DIMM slots for a possible 128GB of memory, up to eight network connections per blade and two solid-state disk drives.

"When you're consolidating underutilized servers into a single platform, which is what many customers are doing with virtualization, that platform has to be very expandable," said Mark Potter, general manager of HP's BladeSystem Group. "Memory and I/O are the things that tend to get bottlenecked first."

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