- Oct 15, 2004
- 17
- 0
- 0
Anand,
I see you were at SUNs' lauch of their new low-end Solaris unix servers and have also noticed other Reviews/Topics/Posts about SUNs' unix servers BUT have never seen any mention of the BETTER alternative to SUN. Fujitsu PRIMEPOWER solaris servers.
The FUJITSU servers hold ALL of the benchmarks for perf., cost, reliability etc etc but they do not bash SUN's poor track record of crashing servers (heck, SUN servers still don't have ECC on L2 cache and constantly go down on single bit errors) poor service etc etc. so the Fujitsu PRIMEPOWER servers are a relatively unknown product but once customers purchase Primepowers they never go back to SUN servers. I am one customer than went to Fujitsu primepowers and have never regretted my decision.
SUN is not a manufactuer they are a reassembler, Fujitsu is a US$40+ billion company that is worldwide (the IBM of ASIA) with servers from 2 to 128 cpus perhaps you should check them out.
I see you were at SUNs' lauch of their new low-end Solaris unix servers and have also noticed other Reviews/Topics/Posts about SUNs' unix servers BUT have never seen any mention of the BETTER alternative to SUN. Fujitsu PRIMEPOWER solaris servers.
The FUJITSU servers hold ALL of the benchmarks for perf., cost, reliability etc etc but they do not bash SUN's poor track record of crashing servers (heck, SUN servers still don't have ECC on L2 cache and constantly go down on single bit errors) poor service etc etc. so the Fujitsu PRIMEPOWER servers are a relatively unknown product but once customers purchase Primepowers they never go back to SUN servers. I am one customer than went to Fujitsu primepowers and have never regretted my decision.
SUN is not a manufactuer they are a reassembler, Fujitsu is a US$40+ billion company that is worldwide (the IBM of ASIA) with servers from 2 to 128 cpus perhaps you should check them out.