Sun Microsystems is preparing to launch two systems that will bring its UltraSparc IV processor into the low end of the company's server product line. Called the Sun Fire V490 and V890, the servers are slated to be introduced during Sun's Network Computing quarterly product announcement on September 21, Sun said.
Though the new servers are similar to Sun's Sun Fire V480 and V880 servers, which are based on single-core UltraSparc III processors, they have been redesigned in order to accommodate the cooling and power requirements of the dual-core UltraSparc IV line of processors, which eventually will require more power than does the UltraSparc III, said Andy Ingram, vice president of marketing for Sun's Processor and Network Products Group.
Users will find that the systems behave the same way as their UltraSparc III counterparts but with "twice the throughput," he said. "What you're going to get with the (V890) is the footprint and price point of an 8-way with the throughput of a 16-way," he said.
The new systems will be priced "in the same range" as the V880 and V480, Ingram said, though he declined to give specific pricing information.
Though they cannot be ordered on Sun's Web site, the company actually began shipping the new systems in August, Ingram said.
When Sun launched its first UltraSparc IV systems in February, it focused on big systems with between 12 and 72 processors. It introduced the new processor on its high-end Sun Fire E25K and E20K servers as well as the midrange Sun Fire E2900, E4900 and E6900 systems.
The UltraSparc IV currently is available in both 1.05GHz and 1.2GHz configurations. Sun plans to offer an UltraSparc IV "speed bump" within nine months, and within 18 months, the company expects to begin shipping systems with the next generation of the processor, called UltraSparc IV+, Ingram said.
The UltraSparc IV+ will mark the end of the road for Sun's conventional UltraSparc designs as it switches to the multicore "throughput computing" chips it is now developing. The throughput computing chips are being designed to execute a large number of operations, or threads, simultaneously. By 2006 -- around the time Sun is expected to come to market with the first generation of its throughput computing processors, code-named Niagara -- the company will also begin shipping systems based on an upcoming generation of Fujitsu Ltd.'s Sparc64 processor, code-named Olympus. Olympus will also be a multicore processor, but it is expected to have twice the performance of the UltraSparc IV+, Ingram said.
Olympus will fill the role that Sun had expected to be served by UltraSparc V processor, which Sun scrapped in April of this year, he said.
With the launch of the two new systems, Sun is bringing UltraSparc IV to a section of the market that has become extremely important to the company, said Gordon Haff, an analyst with industry research company Illuminata.
"They've kind of done the enterprise systems; now they're doing the high end of the volume space," he said. "Those have been pretty important classes of products for them. In fact, it's probably one of the few really bright spots in the UltraSparc line over the last year or so. So obviously it makes perfect sense that they are now available"
Haff expects Sun to eventually bring the UltraSparc IV to its single-processor and dual-processor Sun Fire systems as well, though Sun has not said when it plans to do this.
Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation (SPEC) benchmarks for the V890 system can be found at: http://www.specbench.org/cpu2000/results/res2004q3/cpu2000-20040809-03333.html.
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