Intel wants to be the ISP's ISP

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS
In September, the processor maker plans to deploy the first of what will become many worldwide centres built to provide data centre services to ISPs (Internet service providers), VARs (value added resellers), large enterprises and other companies offering Web-based services, according to Intel officials speaking here Thursday at the company's semiannual analysts meeting. The centres will range in size from small $50m (£30.4m) facilities housing fewer than 2,000 servers to facilities costing $100m to build and averaging 5,500 servers. Intel expects the first customer to deliver a service from its first data centre, to be located near Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California, sometime in the third quarter. That service grew out of a deal with Excite Inc. for the Excite Shopping Service, announced last week. Intel plans to have the second data centre online somewhere in Europe before the end of the year. In the first half of 2000, Intel expects to have built "tens" of centres, according to Mike Aymar, vice president and general manager, Intel Data Services (IDS), the new division in charge of the data centre business. The centres will be connected via a VPN (virtual private network). The move does not indicate a strategic shift at Intel away from chips and other hardware to services-oriented businesses, as has been the case with some of the large OEMs Intel counts as customers, according to the company. "IDS is the only service business we're doing," said Paul Otellini, executive vice president and general manager of Intel's Architecture Business Group. "I can't see Intel not being a product company." Intel will be competing with IBM, Electronic Data Systems Corp. and other already established service providers. But such data centres for Web services will be a multibillion dollar business, according to Gerry Parker, executive vice president and general manager of the New Business Group, an Intel entity that oversees a fund to invest in internal projects. The group has a $50m budget this year and so far has invested half that to a half-dozen projects, including IDS, said Parker. "There will be a number of players," said Parker. "I expect we'll have customers, competitors and suppliers, all with the same name." Company officials declined to comment on what Intel has to offer that other, entrenched players don't. But Parker likened the business to running a worldwide semiconductor manufacturing operation. "We know how to a keep factories running 24 hours a days, seven days a week, 365 days a year," he said. Separately, Intel is also targeting ISPs with an Internet Service Provider Program to be launched next week at the ISPCon tradeshow in the US. Primarily a sales program, it will enable Intel to work with partners to fine-tune its hardware to meet the particular needs of ISPs, said Otellini. For example, through its resellers Intel will deliver ruggedised and smaller form-factor motherboards for the servers ISPs require. Intel will also make sure software, such as Linux and the Apache Web server, is optimised for Intel's chips, said Otellini. Intel discussed a broad range of other topics at the analysts meeting, including its processor road map for the first half of 2000. At that time Intel is scheduled to deliver Pentium III Xeons for servers/workstations and Pentium IIIs for mainstream PC desktops and mobile PCs, all at or above 700MHz clock speeds. That means notebook PCs and desktops will be at performance parity. Otellini said the company does see more large customers that are starting to buy their workers only notebook PCs rather than desktop systems. Craig Barrett, Intel's president and CEO, in his introductory presentation, said the company next month will make an announcement concerning StrongARM, its embedded processor. Otellini said half of the company's research and development money is devoted to servers and workstations, including 10 CPU projects, 10 chip set programs and more than 20 board/system projects. He also said Intel in the first quarter regained all the market share it lost last year in the so-called value PC market, where Intel sells its Celeron chip. Intel plans to move the SIMD (single-instruction, multiple-data) instruction set found on the Pentium III to the Celeron, but not this year. Why not? "Any reason?" "Sure, we want to sell Pentium IIIs, Otellini said"

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

BugStalker

"Interesting thought ... If you installed Win7 as a dual boot on a machine that previously only had Linux, and it wrecked your Linux installation,...

19 minutes ago by BugStalker on Windows 7 Declares War on GRUB
whs001

This is an excellent summary of Ubuntu and Mint and the interface differences between them. Most such articles take a very partisan position for...

23 minutes ago by whs001 on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Moley

@ewallace. Not so clear. Anyone can obtain the text, for example from here http://www.ustr.gov/webfm_send/2379. I support ACTA so long as it and...

40 minutes ago by Moley on ACTA: Facts, misconceptions and questions
45283

I think WinRT is fantastic. I just wish it was an option for people that didn't want to go through Microsoft's App Store with its attendant...

4 hours ago by 45283 on Why Windows 8 needs architectural hygiene for WOA
Burn-IT

Nine people? £30m? Who's back pocket is that lot going in? And IF they say it is for new buildings, what about all the ones the government has...

5 hours ago by Burn-IT on Police set to launch three £30m e-crime hubs
ewallace

Just to be clear, nobody knows what is in the text of ACTA, here is a photograph of the text of ACTA http://twitpic.com/8h9iju as submitted to the...

5 hours ago by ewallace on ACTA: Facts, misconceptions and questions
fgvrg56

Unfortunately main issue is that ASUS is refusing to accept that they make some mistake on this version of asus Transformer prime. 1 - GPS sensor...

6 hours ago by fgvrg56 on Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime Wi-Fi & GPS problems?
Ben Woods

@Marcus A fair question. Just talked with Archos which said it was working on an announcement for next week....

7 hours ago by Ben Woods on Archos confirms G9 Ice Cream Sandwich update schedule
Marcus Karlsson

Any update on this, considering the claimed "first week of February"?

8 hours ago by Marcus Karlsson via Facebook on Archos confirms G9 Ice Cream Sandwich update schedule
apexwm

Bill Goodrich : Just as al_langevin pointed out, with Windows Server 2008 there is no Services for Macintosh anymore. It's gone, not available....

17 hours ago by apexwm on Windows Server 2008 drops the ball for Mac compatibility
txtrainguy

Replying to an old topic that I'm currently facing with my CEO (who is on a Mac). Our servers are primarily Windows Servers, office is about...

23 hours ago by txtrainguy on Windows Server 2008 drops the ball for Mac compatibility
k0tcs3

Sure, that makes perfect sense. Pay wrong-doers money and thank them for breaching your security and pointing out your flaws, that would surely...

24 hours ago by k0tcs3 on US indicts Romanian over NASA climate change hack
Random_Error

I think he's referring specifically to Android apps, as Apple do regulate their App Store, but Google seem to let any old crap onto the Android store!

24 hours ago by Random_Error on RIM: BlackBerry will keep 'garbage' apps out of store
Paul Fezziwig

Keep the crap apps out?! How will they compete with Android and Apple's claim to fame of having so many life changing apps? I wonder if the media...

1 day ago by Paul Fezziwig via Facebook on RIM: BlackBerry will keep 'garbage' apps out of store
Aigars Mahinovs

It has been shown time after time that if there is an author store that sells the songs at even 1$ per song and gives you a high-quality digital...

1 day ago by Aigars Mahinovs via Facebook on Copyright isn't working, says European Commission
awbMaven

""As a result of Butyka's alleged conduct, researchers were unable to use the computers for more than two months while NASA removed the malicious...

1 day ago by awbMaven on US indicts Romanian over NASA climate change hack
subhorup

It simultaneously worries me and uplifts me that a self-proclaimed group of internet activists name themselves after Indian mythical figures....

2 days ago by subhorup on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
naviathan

It's actually far easier to work anonymously on the internet than you think. With tools like Tor bouncing your traffic around the world before...

2 days ago by naviathan on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
Agnostic_OS

1000272134 and bluedalmatian with you both there but then I'm still in 10.04 land (and happy with it)

2 days ago by Agnostic_OS on Ten factors that make Ubuntu 11.10 a hit
apexwm

Interesting article and definitely see your points on the products mentioned. One of the top products for our Help Desk (approximately 20% of all...

2 days ago by apexwm on Ten flawed products that derail productivity