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InternetNews October 17, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Sun Gives Spark to High-end Machines The UltraSparc IV+ speed bump should provide quite a charge for Sun Microsystems' customers of the E20K and E25K servers. |
InternetNews February 22, 2005 Michael Singer |
Sun Returns to SPARC The company takes some of the focus off of its AMD-based servers and caters to its bread and butter customers with the UltraSPARC IV 1.35 GHz processor. |
InternetNews September 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun Fire Gets an UltraSPARC Refresh The company ships new servers to partners while it prepares for faster processor designs in the next nine months. |
InternetNews October 5, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun SPARCs Latest Chip Sun Microsystems is expected to herald the arrival of its latest dual-core UltraSPARC processor today. |
InternetNews December 6, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Sun to Bow Multi-Core in Manhattan Determined to regain its swagger in the Unix server space, Sun Microsystems today will introduce new computing machines that pack a rack of servers on one chip to run Internet programs. |
InternetNews April 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun Abandons UltraSPARC Projects Sun Microsystems says it will continue on its Throughput Computing path, but the Millennium and Gemini chips, some of its next-generation UltraSPARC processors, are no more. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2008 |
Themis to Offer Blade Servers Based on Sun UltraSPARC T2 Microprocessor The server offers more performance and lower power. |
InternetNews October 13, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
Sun Amps Up Midrange Server Offerings Taking aim at the enterprise transaction market, not to mention the competition, Sun rolls out some powerful new servers. |
InternetNews June 28, 2010 |
Oracle Rolls Out High-End x86 Cluster Servers New mass-compute servers promise denser compute in a smaller space and much easier to manage. |
InternetNews August 25, 2009 |
Sun, IBM Keep Flying the RISC Flag It may be an x86 world, but IBM and even battered and bruised Sun are sticking with the RISC architecture. |
InternetNews July 13, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM Eyes Unix Future With P5 Servers Big Blue looks to take the lead from HP and Sun in the $21 billion Unix server market with new Power5 chip system. |
InternetNews April 17, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Sun, Fujitsu Light SPARC For New Servers Sun Microsystems advance a 20-year relationship of SPARC development with new multi-core-based systems. |
InternetNews May 11, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel Deals Dual for Duel The chipmaker ships its 1.6 GHz Itanium 'Madison' dual-core processor as an alternative to RISC chips like the POWER 5 or the UltraSPARC IV. |
InternetNews August 15, 2006 David Needle |
New AMD Opteron Systems Unleashed AMD officially rolled out "Rev F," the latest version of its Opteron processor for servers and workstations, and several top tier computer makers announced new Rev F-based systems. |
The Motley Fool September 2, 2009 Eric Jhonsa |
Why Oracle's Getting More Than It Bargained For Sun's earnings show just how weak its hardware business is. |
InternetNews March 18, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Would a Sun-IBM Marriage Work? Overlapping products and vastly different cultures will present challenges in a merger between IBM and Sun. But if they make it work, the results could be great for both sides. |
InternetNews December 11, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Sun Opens Up UltraSPARC T2 Core Sun Microsystems is expanding its open source program around its SPARC processors with the announcement Tuesday that it would provide the OpenSPARC T2 RTL processor design to the open source community under the GPL license. |
InternetNews August 6, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Sun Doubles Down On Niagara 2 Sun's UltraSPARC T2 has double the threads, amped up floating point and massive multithreading. |
InternetNews November 14, 2005 David Needle |
Sun Launches Power-Saving, 8-Core Chips Sun Microsystems touts big power savings and eco-friendliness of its new UltraSparc T1 chip line. |
The Motley Fool June 16, 2009 Tim Beyers |
Less Sunshine for Oracle Recently acquired Sun reportedly cancels another chip project. |
InternetNews June 6, 2007 David Needle |
Sun's Latest Blade Supports Three Chip Lines The Sun Blade 6000 Modular System is available with blades based on AMD Opteron, Intel Xeon and Sun's own UltraSparc T1 processor. |
InternetNews May 4, 2009 Alex Goldman |
IBM Attacks Oracle With Sun Processor Bounty IBM claims to be the only major open source vendor that's increasing its market share and a new offer aims to accelerate the trend. |
InternetNews November 15, 2005 David Needle |
Sun CTO: 'Microprocessors Are About to Die' Sun Microsystems CTO Greg Papadopoulos says "server-on-a-chip" processors signal the end of traditional microprocessors. |
InternetNews November 28, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
Why a Sun/EMC Match Might Work Opinion: Some things just can't be allowed to fade into the sunset. A Silicon Valley original like Sun is one of them. Here's why EMC might be its best suitor. |
InternetNews November 17, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
What's Next for Sun? Can Sun cut its way to profitability and prominence, or is it just looking for a graceful exit - and friendly buyer - at this point. |
InternetNews December 6, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Sun Opens Design to New T1 Chip Sun Microsystems extended its open source policy to silicon, pledging to open up the architecture to its new UltraSparc T1 multi-core processor. |
Bio-IT World October 14, 2004 Robert Mcmillan |
High-Performance Computing: Muscle in the Middle New processor designs are giving a price/performance boost to midrange Unix servers. |
The Motley Fool November 6, 2007 Anders Bylund |
You Can't Be Everything Under the Sun Sun's scatter-shot strategy could use a fragment of fresh focus. The company reported another lukewarm quarter. |
InternetNews October 9, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Sun Announces Niagara 2 Servers Sun introduces two rack systems and one blade, determined to grab the virtualization market. |
InternetNews February 8, 2010 |
IBM Power7: Big Blue's Answer to Oracle, Intel The new processor debuts amid promises of serious performance increases and slick new features. Will it be enough to quiet the competition? |
InternetNews August 16, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Sun, IBM Link up to Support Solaris on x86 Sun Microsystems has partnered with IBM to optimize and support Solaris on IBM's x86 System x and BladeCenter servers. |
InternetNews December 19, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Oracle Favors Sun in Licensing Change Oracle has again pared its software licensing schemes for multi-core servers, offering significant discounts to machines based on Sun Microsystems' UltraSparc T1 chips, AMD and Intel chips. |
InternetNews July 22, 2010 |
Oracle Looks to Calm Sun Customer Concerns A Garter report found that Sun customers aren't happy with the flow of information from the company's new owner. Now Oracle is moving to calm frustrated Sun users. |
InternetNews August 10, 2010 |
Oracle Reveals Solaris 11 Plans Solaris 11 will include new features and also incorporate technologies developed as part of the openSolaris project. |
InternetNews September 7, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Sun Microsystems Refreshes Partner Program Looking to reinvigorate its partner program, Sun Microsystems said it will replace its iForce program with the Sun Partner Advantage Program. |
InternetNews December 9, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Sun to The Head of The Class? Sun Microsystems's new UltraSparc T1 line proves that multi-core is disruptive ... but in a good way. |
InternetNews May 24, 2006 Clint Boulton |
Server Sales Fall But Shipments Climb Servers are still selling at a healthy clip, but customers are consolidating gear to cut costs, according to new research from IDC and Gartner. |
The Motley Fool September 2, 2009 Anders Bylund |
The Amazing Bouncy Server The market for server-class computers has never been this weak. Is it time to buy -- and where are the winners? |
InternetNews June 24, 2010 |
Oracle Rides Sun to Big 4Q Earnings Oracle posted a profit of $3 billion for the latest quarter. |
InternetNews July 16, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun, Fujitsu SPARC up Relationship Expect your next sales pitch in the next year or so to include a server made by the other company. |
InternetNews September 25, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
First Intel-Based Servers From Sun Introduced Nine months after first announcing their plans to get together, the alliance between Sun and Intel gave birth to a pair of bouncing baby servers today: two Sun Fire quad-core 1U and 2U low-profile servers geared for virtualization environments. |
The Motley Fool October 16, 2009 Eric Jhonsa |
A Brave New World of Low-Power Servers New systems running cheaper, less power-hungry chips will cause problems for Intel, AMD, and others. |
InternetNews September 14, 2009 |
Some Customers Are Sticking With Sun As HP and IBM aggressively pitch Sun customers, many are hanging in there. Oracle plans to debut a new Sun/Oracle database system this week. |
Bank Systems & Technology April 20, 2009 Maria Bruno-Britz |
Oracle to Buy Sun Microsystems After original deal with IBM collapsed, Sun has found itself a new acquirer in Oracle. |
InternetNews February 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun's Server Overhaul Plays Both Sides The company introduces some 25 different products including new UltraSPARC and Opteron servers. |
InternetNews May 8, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Ellison Commits to Sun's Hardware Business Oracle boss says making its own chips is "very, very important." |
InternetNews April 14, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Sun Unwraps Network-Oriented x86 Blades New Nehalem-based, network-connected servers sound an awful lot like something Cisco is trying to do. |
The Motley Fool May 28, 2010 Eric Jhonsa |
The Sun Isn't Shining for Oracle This is one acquisition Oracle could regret. |
InternetNews April 3, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
IBM's Takeover of Sun Heads for the Finish Line? After fading from the front page, the talk of an IBM/Sun Microsystems merger came roaring back to the forefront on late this week following a report in the New York Times that the talks were approaching the final stages, and Sun had dropped its asking price. |
The Motley Fool October 31, 2008 Anders Bylund |
Meet the New Sun, Better Than the Old Sun Sun Microsystems ain't what it used to be. The new Sun relies on virtualization-friendly blade servers, storage arrays, and open-source software. And that's a good thing. |