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IBM cools on Linux support for Itanium

February 11, 2003 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - IBM has pulled back on its work tuning the Linux operating system for Intel Corp.'s Itanium processor, a move that possibly points to a larger shift away from the fledgling processor, according to an analyst.
IBM has transferred a handful of developers who had worked to make Linux perform well on Itanium to the task of tying the operating system to its own Power processor, said Ron Favali, a spokesman for IBM. This transition away from Itanium came as a result of slow market adoption of the chip, according to Favali, and could signal a growing feud between IBM and Intel.
"IBM doesn't have anyone dedicated to working with Linux on Itanium," Favali said. "Our view right now is that Itanium is like a science project. There's not a market for it."
IBM has been lukewarm in its support of Itanium to this point. The company said it planned to release an Itanium 2-based server but is taking its time doing so. Dell Computer Corp. has taken a similar stance on Itanium and has not yet shipped an Itanium 2-based server. Itanium 2 chips have been available since July.
Rival Hewlett-Packard Co. has taken the opposite approach, making a commitment to build Itanium servers in the coming years instead of its PA-RISC and Alpha-based systems. HP picked Itanium over its own chips in part because it believed the industry at large would adopt the processor. Such hopes, however, have not been realized.
"IBM is getting less and less shy about making clear that its Power chip is the company's 64-bit play, especially for Linux," said Gordon Haff, an analyst at Illuminata Inc. in Nashua, N.H. "IBM would rather use their processor because they can do more with it and get more money coming out of the system because they own more of it."
IBM has had a number of Itanium customer wins in tandem with SuSE Linux AG, but the company maintains that the brighter part of its future with Intel involves building 32-bit servers with the Xeon processor.
"We'll make Itanium systems available if a customer wants it, but our customers aren't really clamoring for Itanium," Favali said. "We do think Xeon has a lot of life left in it."
Dell is also focusing more of its attention on the Xeon processors and is doing a modicum of work to tune Linux for Itanium. One of the company's engineers touted himself as "Dell's only [Itanium] Linux engineer" in his online resume, but he changed this to say "lead [Itanium]


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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