Categories: CloudDatacentre

Dell Launches Low Power Via Server

After building up hype earlier this month, Dell officially launched its XS11-VX8 server system May 19. The new Dell server, which is designed for dense, Web 2.0 data centre environments, uses Via Nano processors, which are more commonly seen in netbooks and low-cost laptops.

For Dell, offering the XS11-VX8 server with Via Nano processors was a way to offers greater power efficiency and density in a smaller form factor system. According to Dell, users can pack up to 12 of these XS11-VX8 servers into a 2U (3.5-inch) chassis.

Dell is hoping to sell the XS11-VX8 server to companies that need thousands of x86-based servers in their data centers instead of a typical enterprise deployment of 10 or 20 systems. These type of “hyper-scale” companies include Web 2.0 and Web hosting businesses or enterprises interested in building out cloud computing environments in order to host or deliver applications through the Web.

With Via processors, Dell official say that the XS11-VX8 server will consume only 15 watts for power when the operating system is running idle. When running a full application load, the servers consume between 20 and 29 watts. The Via Nano processor family, which is built on 65-nanometer manufacturing technology, range in clock speed from 1GHz to 1.8GHz.

Each Dell XS11-VX8 server also supports its own main memory system, hard disk drive and two Gigabit Ethernet network interface cards or NICs.

The Dell systems and Via chip also support 64-bit applications and the servers also support hardware-based virtualisation.

The Dell XS11-VX8 server costs about $400 and Dell expects to begin shipping these systems by June.

The move by Dell to create the XS11-VX8 server is also a coup for Via, which is well known in IT circles but lags far behind the likes of Intel and Advanced Micro Devices. Each quarter, Via usually accounts for less than 1 percent of the world’s x86 processor shipments. However, the companies is trying to change that and has positioned its Nano processors as an alternative in the netbook market currently dominated by the Intel Atom processor.

Dell is also not the only company experimenting with different types of processors. Earlier this year, Super Micro Computer said it would sell a server that uses Intel Atom processors.

Scott Ferguson eWEEK USA 2014. Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Share
Published by
Scott Ferguson eWEEK USA 2014. Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Recent Posts

US Finalises $6.6bn Award For TSMC Arizona Plants

US Commerce Department finalises $6.6bn subsidy to TSMC for leading-edge chip plants in Arizona, as…

12 hours ago

SpaceX Prepares Tender Offer At $250bn Valuation

SpaceX to begin tender offer in December valuing company at $210bn, as Elon Musk's xAI…

13 hours ago

US Releases Security Advice For AI In Critical Infrastructure

US Department of Homeland Security releases advice for development and deployment of AI in critical…

13 hours ago

Lenovo Beats Estimates, Raises Projections As PC Sales Recover

World's biggest PC maker Lenovo beats sales predictions, raises forecast for 2025 as AI capabilities,…

14 hours ago

China Chip Production Slows Ahead Of New US Sanctions

Chip production slows in China in October ahead of expected export controls, while annual EV…

14 hours ago

Which? Seeks £3bn In Apple iCloud Competition Claim

Apple effectively locked 40 million UK users into iCloud and overcharged them, claims £3bn legal…

15 hours ago