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    Q&A: Dell on its servers, AMD and recovery

We take some time with two of Dell's server executives to talk about the company's recent product and strategy launches as well as the state of the market today.

By Jennifer Scott, 27 Mar 2010 at 09:34

Dell logo

It's that time of year again - the processor companies have launched their latest architectures and now it is time for the hardware vendors to refresh their product lines.

This week was Dell's turn. We attended the launch event of its latest server, storage and service offerings in San Francisco and caught up with two of its server executives - Stori Waugh, server marketing manager, and David Ard, product marketing manager for PowerEdge - to talk more about what it has released and how the industry is doing.

Why have you opted for three Nehalem EX products but only one from AMD in your latest four server products?

David Ard (DA): From our perspective we want to continue to drive choice for our customers. So we have to leverage our partners to make sure we are delivering the solutions that make the most sense with the different workloads they need.

With some of the innovative opportunities with the Nehalem EX architecture we're delivering some more four socket servers that we hadn't had and differentiated on in the market and on the Magny-Cours side with AMD. It is taking advantage of some of the value AMD is introducing to really go after a piece of the market that we haven't been able to touch before in the four socket entry space.

We will deliver choice for both our customers and really position it around where the workloads are and what our customers needs are.

How do Dell's new servers compare to competitors and what is it Dell is doing differently?

SW: I would look at the new EX platforms [where] you [can make use of] three times the amount of memory. That is an Intel architecture advantage that it is bringing to market so you will see a lot of vendors doing that.

But one of the things that we are doing in our traditional 2U, two socket platform is we are extending memory capabilities in that 2U form factor and four socket performance in that that same box.

We are doing that through what is called our “flexmembridge” technology, a patent pending technology... We can really provide higher levels of performance, especially for virtualised workloads. It is unique in the way that Dell is doing that compared to what you will see some of our competitors doing and what IBM has already announced.

I would [also] say one of the things you should look for next week is who is actually able to provide these products to customers. We think that [Dell's time to market with Intel] is going to be a competitive advantage for us.

Not everybody has launched servers yet with the new Intel and AMD architectures, but do you know where you will sit when it comes to price?

SW: I think overall you are always going to see that Dell owns affordability, from a value tenent if you will, so we are going to be very competitive. I haven't seen competitive pricing yet so it is hard to say, but hands down we are always very competitive, especially with our x86 boxes.

DA: There may be things that our competition does and makes noise about that really at the end of the day our customers have said “that doesn't really matter to me.” What [they] want to do is have a solution that is flexible, giving the ability to go at problems in a very affordable way.

Dell is predominantly a hardware vendor, but you are now building products specifically for cloud computing and virtualisation. Is this a protective strategy?

SW: the focus on cloud and virtualisation I think has been driven by customer demand. The whole reason virtualisation became so popular is because [customers] weren't maximising the utilisation out of their servers and by virtualising you max that capacity.

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