IBM is rolling out a host of preconfigured systems that offer the tech giant’s analytics software on mainframe and Power-based servers.
The new Smart Analytics System servers are among a
wide-ranging release of products—including storage offerings—that are
aimed at helping businesses make better use of the massive amounts of
data they’re collecting, according to IBM officials. The company has a
vision of how knowledge and data can be shared better on a global
basis, but it also believes that can’t happen with traditional IT
approaches without risking greater sprawl and slower customer
responsiveness, according to an IBM spokesperson.
The new offerings—more than 55 new and upgraded
server and storage technologies, in all—are aimed at addressing those
issues, the spokesperson said.
The new analytics systems come at a time when
top-tier OEMs are looking at ways of integrating workload-specific
software onto servers, giving enterprises powerful and easy-to-deploy
offerings. Oracle officials have been vocal proponents of this
approach, bundling their software onto SPARC and x86 systems from the
hardware business they inherited when the software giant bought Sun
Microsystems last year.
Oracle over the past two years has introduced its
Exadata Database Machine, a preconfigured data warehousing system the
combines Oracle’s software with Sun server and storage technology, and
the Exalogic Elastic Compute Cloud,
a cloud-in-a-box solution that includes Oracle’s virtual machine
software and other applications in hardware that runs on either x86 or
SPARC chips.
Most recently, Oracle earlier this month unveiled its Exalytics system,
which when it rolls out next year will include the company’s
parallelized TimesTen relational online transaction processing (OLTP)
and Essbase parallel online analytical processing databases running on
a Sun Fire system powered by Intel Xeon E7 chips.
Analytics has been a focal point at IBM over the
past several years as the company has pushed its Smarter Planet
initiative, which calls for enabling organizations to more quickly and
easily analyze the huge amounts of data they’re generating and to
leverage it for better business results. The Smarter Planet push
appears to be gaining traction: In the third quarter, Smarter Planet revenue for
IBM grew 50 percent over the same period last year, according to the
company. The Smart Analytic Systems fall in line with that strategy.
IBM’s Smart Analytics System 9700 and 9710 are
zEnterprise mainframe systems that run either Red Hat or SUSE Linux and
offer mainframe-based data warehouse and business intelligence (BI)
software. They also come at an entry-level price, according to IBM,
though the vendor was not specific on the pricing.
In addition, IBM unveiled the Smart Analytics
System 7710, based on Big Blue’s Power7 chips, and x86-based Smart
Analytics System 5710. Botha are all-in-one offerings for business
analytics and reporting services that cost less than previous
integrated IBM offerings, the company said. The integrated solutions
offering deployment times of days rather than months and offer such
capabilities as BI reporting, analysis, dashboards, data mining and
text analytics.
IBM also is rolling out the DB2 Analytics
Accelerator, which integrates Big Blue’s Netezza data warehouse
appliance into IBM’s zEnterprise mainframe. Combining the two merges
OLTP systems with analytics to create a single business analytics
platform, according to company officials. The appliance plugs into the
DB2 for z/OS database on zEnterprise 196 or 114 server, and the DB2
database
The new analytics appliance plugs into IBM
zEnterprise 196 enterprise server, and the accelerator connects to the
DB2 database as transactions are processed in the cloud. The
accelerator incorporates technology from Netezza, a data analytics
provider acquired by IBM last year for $1.7 billion.
The rollouts also include the Storwize V7000
Unified midrange disk storage system and IBM System Storage DS8000
Release 6.2, an enterprise-level disk system. Both are designed to help
businesses more efficiently store, manage and analyze data. IBM also is
enhancing the XIV Storage System Gen3, which was unveiled in July to
help improve performance for demanding workloads. Now the system
supports 3 terabyte disk drives, increasing capacity by 50 percent and
bringing usable capacity to up to 243TB per rack.
In addition, IBM is rolling out new offerings to
automate security and compliance to help reduce IT sprawl in
virtualized environments. PowerSC offers automated tools for
virtualized environments on Power systems running PowerVM, enabling
users to automatically apply security profiles and generate reports
about compliance. IBM’s z/VM 6.2 lets use cluster together up to four
instances of z/VM and manage them as a single z/VM system. IBM also
upgraded its Systems Director v6.3 management software.
For virtualized and cloud computing environments,
IBM is offering SmartCloud Entry, which company officials called the
building blocks for enabling organizations to build scalable private
clouds on virtualized Power and x86-based System x hardware. Similarly,
zEnterprise Starter Edition for Cloud gives users an entry-level
infrastructure-as-a-service (IAAS) model for running Linux on System z
mainframes with Tivoli Provisioning Manager. IBM officials called it a
cloud-in-a-box offering.
The BladeCenter Foundation for Cloud is a
converged cloud computing platform that offers server, storage,
networking and management software to enable users to quickly create a
scalable x86-based virtualization environment. The offering comes in
three sizes designed to fit various budgets. The offering echoes what
other OEMs are doing, such as Cisco Systems with its Unified Computing
System, or UCS, which offers compute, storage, networking and
management in a single unit.