Dell calls for blade server standards
Michael Dell, chief executive of the PC giant, takes the stage at the OracleWorld trade show, rallying for "a common blade architecture."
"There should be a common blade architecture," CEO Michael Dell said in a keynote speech at the OracleWorld trade show here. "If we are successful, and I am reasonably optimistic we will be...I think you will see a high-volume market for these blades."
However, Dell said the transition from traditional servers to blades will not happen overnight. "I think it is going to take awhile," he said.
Dell used crutches to get onstage after breaking his ankle recently when a horse he was riding fell.
"Contrary to what I may look like today, we've never been on more solid footing as a company," he said.
Getting a Dell-sponsored blade initiative off the ground, though, could be tough. IBM and Intel have already formed an alliance to standardize the construction of blade servers.
![]() ![]() Michael Dell, CEO, Dell |
"We haven't abandoned blades, but demand isn't as strong as once perceived," Reza Rooholamini, a director in Dell's enterprise systems group, said in an interview in August.
In August, IBM launched its "Dell on Ice" program to woo blade server consumers and other customers from Dell. Big Blue is devoting a team of hundreds of sales and technical resources staff to the campaign, according to Jeff Benck, director of xSeries product marketing at IBM. The program runs through the end of the year and is available to Dell customers who aren't IBM customers.
Dell in his keynote speech likened the current status of blades to the pre-Internet period in which computers were networked together using a variety of competing technologies, such as Ethernet and Token Ring. Only when Ethernet became ubiquitous, did the Internet, and computer networking in general, take off, Dell said.
Dell declined to say which businesses the company is talking to about blades or which components it is seeking to standardize.
Asked about the overall technology spending environment, Dell said that his company's business has held up quite well but that overall growth has been slight, though there has been spending growth over the last four quarters.
"What happens in the second half is likely to continue to be moderate growth," Dell said in a question-and-answer session with reporters.
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