Big Blue cools its already none-too-warm support for Intel's Itanium processor, CNET News.com has learned. Photo: IBM's X3 chipset Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about disruptive companies, technologies and usage models. Today, IBM announced its much anticipated POWER9 chip, its ...
IBM sold off its x86 server business two years ago to Lenovo, thinking it was exiting a cut-throat, low-margin business. But the cloud has only intensified x86 server chip sales, and IBM is paying ...
IBM is launching preconfigured LinuxONE servers aimed at simplifying networking and securing data-center resources in small to medium-sized organizations that need to support everything from AI to ...
IBM is looking to expand its reach into the small and midsize market with an agreement to license its x86 server technology to Lenovo. The two vendors said that Lenovo plans to build one-processor and ...
Lenovo's plan to buy IBM's x86 server business is facing delays over national security concerns. The Wall Street Journal reports that US security officials and members of the Committee on Foreign ...
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More IBM is looking to grow its enterprise server business with the expansion ...
IBM on Monday rolled out a handful of beefed-up 64-bit Intel servers that feature a 2MB cache, adding 18 percent to the systems’ overall performance. The additions also contain support for two new ...
With a new penchant for sharing and a willingess to look outside its walls, Big Blue has largely been able to contain its biggest problem in the server market: itself. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET ...
Outfitted with the Telum II processor and Spyre accelerator, the IBM z17 bolsters response times, throughput, observability, and security with AI workloads in mind. The Big Iron evolution continues.
I've got a ton of Dell PowerEdges of various generations, a few IBM, and a couple HP DL365 G1s. The Dells have a lot to recommend them, and their Linux/non-Microsoft support has improved, but RAM is ...
IBM has largely been able to contain its biggest problem in the server market: itself. For a decade, IBM's server group was losing ground to competitors because of a fragmented product line, political ...
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