Dell PowerEdge
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dell, Inc. gives the moniker PowerEdge (PE) to its server product line, which as of 2007 brought in approximately 15% of Dell's overall revenue from computer hardware sales [1].
Most PowerEdge servers use the X86 architecture. The early exceptions to this, the PowerEdge 3250, PowerEdge 7150, and PowerEdge 7250, used Intel's Itanium processor, but Dell abandoned Itanium in 2005[2] after failing to find adoption in the marketplace. The partnership between Intel and Dell remained close, with Intel remaining the exclusive source of processors in Dell's servers until 2006. In May of 2006 Dell announced that it intended to develop servers using AMD Opteron processors.[3] The first Opteron-based PowerEdge systems, the PowerEdge 6950 and the PowerEdge SC1435, appeared in October 2006[4]
PowerEdge machines come configured as tower, rack-mounted, or blade servers. Dell uses a consistent chip-set across servers in the same generation regardless of packaging,[5] allowing for a common set of drivers and system-images.
OEMs ( VARs) also offer solutions based on PowerEdge servers. Loaded with custom software and with minor cosmetic changes, Dell's servers form the underlying hardware in certain appliances from IronPort[6], Google[7], Enterasys[8].
[edit] External links
[edit] Footnotes
This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. Primary sources and sources affiliated with the subject of the article are generally not sufficient for a Wikipedia article. Please include more appropriate citations from reliable sources, or discuss the issue on the talk page. This article has been tagged since February 2008. |
- ^ Press Release — Dell Reports Preliminary Revenue of $14.4 Million
- ^ Dell to Phase Out Computers Using Intel's Itanium
- ^ Press Release — Dell's International And Enterprise Business Drives First Quarter Revenue Growth
- ^ Press Release — Dell Unveils Four- and Two-Socket Servers
- ^ Dell Extends the Scalable Enterprise with Eighth-Generation PowerEdge Servers
- ^ Case Study - Partners in Stopping Crime
- ^ Case Study - In Search Mode
- ^ Case Study - Serving up Security
|