Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
HP Intel Oracle

Is HP Paying Intel To Keep Itanium Alive? 216

itwbennett writes "In a court filing, Oracle accused HP of secretly contracting with Intel to keep making Itanium processors so that it can continue to make money from its locked-in Itanium customers and take business away from Oracle's Sun servers. Oracle says that Intel would have long ago killed off Itanium if not for these payments from HP. For its part, HP called the filing a 'desperate delay tactic' in the lawsuit HP filed against Oracle over its decision to stop developing for Itanium."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Is HP Paying Intel To Keep Itanium Alive?

Comments Filter:
  • Re:Support (Score:5, Informative)

    by Lord_Jeremy ( 1612839 ) on Monday November 21, 2011 @11:25PM (#38132198)
    HP's lawsuit against Oracle was that Oracle had agreed under contract to support the Itanium architecture for a certain period of time. It's the breach of contract that is the problem.
  • by the linux geek ( 799780 ) on Monday November 21, 2011 @11:35PM (#38132282)
    The thing is, other vendors are using it. Huawei and Inspur announced they're developing new Itanium machines earlier this year; Hitachi and Mitsubishi resell HP's machines. NEC and Bull also use Itanium to run their proprietary ACOS and GCOS mainframe operating systems. I think these vendors would probably get pissy if HP got exclusive control of the architecture.
  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Monday November 21, 2011 @11:39PM (#38132310)

    You mean code to prevent it from running on Ultrasparcs IV+ and anything earlier: http://lildude.co.uk/solaris-11-end-of-support-for-legacy-hardware [lildude.co.uk]

    kind of surprising as many customer plan for more than 7 years with large Unix servers, IV+ was introduced in 2005.

  • A few things... (Score:5, Informative)

    by the linux geek ( 799780 ) on Monday November 21, 2011 @11:43PM (#38132322)
    First off, the notion that Itanium is "dying" is ridiculous - or at least just as ridiculous as the idea that SPARC is dying. Power is the only high-end RISC processor that's really thriving. Both IA64 and SPARC bring in hundreds of millions of dollars per quarter, although their revnue is slowly dwindling:

    http://smarterquestions.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UNIX_Revenue_08-2011.png [smarterquestions.org]

    Second, comparing Oracle suddenly killing support to Microsoft and Red Hat killing support is ridiculous. Red Hat is continuing to develop the 5.x tree for IA64, despite the fact that maybe 5% of Itanium customers ran RHEL. Oracle, on the other hand, is just suddenly saying "No more. Nada." despite the fact that they build key apps for all three HP Itanium operating systems (Rdb for VMS, Oracle for HP-UX, Tuxedo for Nonstop.) There's also the fact that Oracle has its own competing UNIX OS and processor, one that hasn't performed particularly well in comparison to Power or Itanium for several years. The whole thing just looks like Oracle is being a bully.
  • Re:Support (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 22, 2011 @12:10AM (#38132452)

    Unfortunately, Oracle claims that no such contract exist and it has publicly challenged HP to produce such a contract and HP has so far refused to take up the challenge. So far HP has not given any credible evidence that analyst believes is valid and its stock price reflects this view.

  • Re:Support (Score:4, Informative)

    by dogsbreath ( 730413 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2011 @01:01AM (#38132678)

    I guess Oracle in their infinite wisdom have decided that a processor in a very marginal market is the reason Sun hardware sales are dying/dead, and not the fact that the Sun line is a choice between Intel (available from everyone) or Sparc (either slow and questionable performance, or power / rack space hungry ).

    Considering it is actually Xeons, x86, and IBM hardware in the virtualization space that is the main market now, I don't see how this legal sidebar with HP does Oracle any benefit.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2011 @01:30AM (#38132798)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Re:Support (Score:5, Informative)

    by Guy Harris ( 3803 ) <guy@alum.mit.edu> on Tuesday November 22, 2011 @05:03AM (#38133560)

    So they come up with this crazy VLIW idea

    Who's "they"? Intel, or HP [hp.com]?

    and realize it will cost a ton of money.

    Which, as I understand it, is why HP partnered with Intel (not the other way around).

    At the same time, they can convince HP to transition away from their existing RISC architectures (PA-RISC

    Which, as I understand it, was HP's intent even before they got Intel involved.

    and Alpha)

    Which was, at the time the HP-Intel partnership was announced, DEC's RISC architecture - DEC hadn't even been bought by Compaq yet, much less Compaq bought by HP.

Kleeneness is next to Godelness.

Working...