IBM to upgrade mainframe features
Published: 19 Oct 2001 10:02 BST
IBM will announce upgrades to its mainframe computer on Friday, refreshing a high-end server line many had given up as extinct.
The upgrades improve some of the features of the z900 mainframe, introduced a year ago, though it leaves the heart of the refrigerator-size machine unchanged.
The changes make the mainframe better able to run the Linux operating system, help it screen out some types of computer attacks, improve the system's ability to conduct encrypted communications, and make it possible to add memory without shutting the machine down.
Mainframes are powerful but expensive computers that can handle fast communications with other computers, making them good for heavy-duty tasks such as processing credit card or bank account transactions. Mainframes also can be partitioned into several independent computers, a useful feature for consolidating work handled by numerous servers into an easier-to-manage system.
Mainframes once were sold by many companies, including Hitachi Data Systems, Amdahl and Unisys, but IBM is for the most part the last company to pursue the strategy.
Sun Microsystems and others, though, have been putting some pressure on the mainframe market with high-end systems that are approaching mainframe capabilities. These systems, while not necessarily replacing mainframes, can unburden them by taking over some tasks that might otherwise require new mainframes. And high-end Unix servers from Sun, Hewlett-Packard and, most recently, IBM itself now feature partitioning capabilities.
Mainframe revenue at IBM still is doing well, though, with 30 percent growth in IBM's most recent quarter.
Among the improvements -- some of them expected -- IBM will announce
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