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... imagine an average laptop computer ... how many times more powerful and capacious than many of the AS/400 models of old. ... now imagine all those AS/400 / iSeries product salesmen in IBM, BPs, trying to compete with the Unix and MS based salesmen; ok, which group can actually demonstrate their products, and with more ease ... and in the prospects own office? OS/400 on a laptop would be an incredible marketing tool, every iSeries salesperson would want one, need one. It would put them on a level playing field with those other application vendors. Even if IBM didn't directly make a profit from a laptop iSeries, the increase in sales of larger systems would surely and adequately compensate. How many iSeries based home workers are there out in the world? IBM, give us a CHEAP and practical laptop / single-user desktop version of OS/400 - if there is no demand, create one. Televisions, microwave ovens, mobile phones, home computers - all inventions that most people don't really need, but they nearly all have them. This is another example of IBM falling out of touch with the needs and desires of their customers. Jeff Bull -----Original Message----- From: jpcarr@tredegar.com [mailto:jpcarr@tredegar.com] Sent: 09 April 2002 03:06 To: midrange-l@midrange.com Subject: Cheaper Servers? This is a portion of Newswire and I apologize for presenting a snippet here, but I wanted to ask the group, Given that, (From Snippet below) "IBM's p670 offering is especially affordable because of the efficiencies gained by sharing processor technology and the Rochester manufacturing facility with the iSeries," If we share the same hardware, and IBM OWNS OS/400 and AIX and they are putting relatively the same R&D money into both, Should the iSeries cost the same as a pSeries ( +/- a few $) ?? Also given; (from snippet below) "The p670 also targets the same types of consolidation workloads as the iSeries, with the largest 16-way box able to support 16 Unix or Linux logical partitions." Then if the pSeries costs lots less, wouldn't that give a considerable marketing advantage to the pSeries? Maybe a town hall meeting question to who ever is going to COMMON. John Carr ---------------------------------- IBM RENEWS ATTACK ON MIDRANGE MARKET http://www.iseriesnetwork.com/nwn/story.cfm?ID=14190 <SNIP> The midrange space is a reliable, growing market, but IBM and its competitors have a secondary reason for their renewed interest, says Sageza Group senior analyst Charles King. "Enterprises have pretty tight purse strings right now," he says. "[IBM's] Regatta and [Sun's] Star Cat 15K are both very interesting, very capable high- end machines, but I think vendors like IBM and Sun may have looked around and thought, maybe we should come out with something cheaper, something companies can get by with, that they can actually afford at this point." IBM's p670 offering is especially affordable because of the efficiencies gained by sharing processor technology and the Rochester manufacturing facility with the iSeries, McGaughan says. The p670 is priced about 36 percent less than comparable Sun Fire models 4800 and 6800 and about 20 percent less than comparable HP RP8400 models. The p670 also targets the same types of consolidation workloads as the iSeries, with the largest 16-way box able to support 16 Unix or Linux logical partitions. (That's compared to the HP 8400 and Sun Fire 4800, which can each support just two partitions, and the Sun Fire 6800, which can support four.) IBM expects to have 64-bit Linux running in a pSeries partition in third quarter. <SNIP> _______________________________________________ This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/cgi-bin/listinfo/midrange-l or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@midrange.com Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l. ________________________________________________________________________ This e-mail has been scanned for all viruses by Star Internet. The service is powered by MessageLabs. 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