Systems/Enterprise:
SUN INTRODUCES FIRST PAY-FOR-USE COMPUTING GRID
Sun Microsystems Inc expanded its vision of "The Network is the Computer" and
took its N1 Grid program to a new level by delivering a first-of-its-kind
capability for customers to access Grids of secure computing power as easily
as buying utility services such as phone, power or water. Using a pay-for-use
pricing model starting at $1 per CPU per hour, Grid cycles can be purchased in
packs of hours through Sun. Sun intends to offer a diverse set of computing
plans and will also work with partners on a wholesale basis to take this
capability to various industries and geographic markets. This online computing
Grid gives customers the powerful combination of the Solaris Operating System
(OS), with extraordinary security and virtualization capabilities, based on
AMD Opteron and SPARC microprocessors.
Powerful resources are now available to any customer seeking affordable,
no-risk computing cycles on an on-demand basis without ownership or onerous
outsourcing contracts.
"We are staking out new ground -- taking our intellectual property and turning
it into pay-for-use network services. To date, the world has taken IT
infrastructure and mapped it to customer workloads," said Jonathan Schwartz,
president and COO at Sun. "This reverses that trend to give customers an
opportunity to leverage dramatically lower shared services costs structure to
which they will map their workloads. What Salesforce.com does for sales force
automation and eBay does for auctions, we are planning on doing for technology
infrastructure."
Sun's new offering will initially target non-transactional workloads. For
example, simulations, modeling, rendering -- in general, workloads optimized
for Grid deployments can simply and securely take advantage of Sun's new
utility Grid offering. Developers, enterprises and governments will now be
able to easily use compute power on an hourly basis, delivering the first
realistic, Grid-based, on-demand computing utility ever introduced in the IT
industry. Another major area of interest will be software testing on
standardized Grids.
Schwartz added, "We envisage a future in which customers will buy compute
cycles from Sun much like they buy wireless calling plans today. Reflecting
that market, Sun will offer wholesale compute cycles to service providers
around the world, taking advantage of our unique and differentiated position
as an owner of our intellectual property. We aren't just going to open the
door to our customers to create wealth more efficiently -- we're going to open
that door for all our partners around the world."
About Sun Microsystems Inc
Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The
Computer" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems Inc to its position as a provider
of industrial-strength hardware, software and services that make the Net work.
Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the World Wide Web at
http://sun.com/.
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