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Sirius Power Reference Charts |
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For more than two decades, IBM midrange systems have been the workhorse servers in medium to large size businesses across the world. And almost every year IBM has announced a new family of midrange servers that are faster, cheaper and more function rich than the predecessors. Every system is uniquely configured and they have all been upgradable to newer technology without a serial number change, and typically with no changes to application as well. |
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To help clients manage these changes, configuration details, software subscription Ts and Cs, maintenance details, performance capacities - anything typically relevant to managing a Sirius has published what was once called the CPW (Computer Processing Workload) Chart. Today it's titled "IBM Power Servers Summary Charts" and includes all the intricate details across models running IBM i, AIX and / or Linux operating systems.
Why publish Power the older charts?
Because these systems have always been serial number protected - the same system asset that a company purchased a decade ago could still be in production today. The ability to upgrade Power systems rather than rip and replace has been a key differentiator for these servers. Having a clear picture of each model and corresponding configurations, software levels, max disk and memory, comparative performance and benchmarks, number of processors, OS partitions, etc. can be an extremely tool for IT professionals. |
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