March 16, 2009

Cisco competitors downplay new blade server

Rivals like Dell and Brocade claim Cisco's Unified Computing System is too limited and warn about vendor lock-in

As Cisco entered the blade server market with its hotly anticipated Unified Computing System Monday, competitors lined up to dismiss the new technology, saying it raises the problem of vendor lock-in and is too limited in scope to address broad customer needs.

Cisco introduced a blade server that is based on future Intel Nehalem processors and includes memory improvements to support applications with large data sets and allow the creation of many more virtual machines on each server. Partners like EMC, VMware, Savvis, BMC, and Microsoft joined Cisco in calling the UCS a major step forward in the datacenter. But Cisco's competitors offered several pieces of criticism.

[ Related: Cisco enters server market with Unified Computing System. ]

A Dell executive calls Cisco's blade server a "one-size-fits-all" product that doesn't take into account the varied needs of customers.

"I think [Cisco is presenting] a very niche-focused approach," says Rick Becker, Dell's vice president of software and solutions. "We believe it can't just be a single blade appliance. You need a whole portfolio. You need to deploy blades where appropriate. You need to deploy rack servers when appropriate." (Compare server products.)

Cisco's new product seems to be "a blade appliance for large application data sets," Becker continues. "That's just a very small segment of the datacenter."

Blades are ideal for applications that span beyond 15 servers but are wasteful for applications that only require three servers because blades share resources like power and fans, Becker says.

Becker promises exciting news from Dell for both rack and blade servers when Intel releases its new Nehalem chips, but could not reveal details due to embargoes. While he acknowledges Cisco is now a competitor in the blade server market, he professes not to be worried. He also notes that Dell still partners with Cisco to deliver networking technology to Dell blade servers.

"I compete with HP, I compete with IBM, and I compete with Sun," Becker says. "And I am perfectly able, willing and ready to compete with Cisco in the server space."

Cisco stresses that its new technology is more than just a blade server, encompassing networking, storage and management features to create an architecture that lets datacenters be managed as a unified environment.

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