The 3000 line was launched in 1972, grew more popular with customers such as credit unions, retailers and health care providers, and later was renamed the e3000 line. Though it eventually shared hardware with some of HP's more widely used Unix servers, the 3000 systems lost influence overall and HP decided to cancel the line.
HP announced the 3000 line's gradual phasing out two years ago, backing off from a plan to reinvigorate the product family.
Although the company will stop selling the systems, it will provide selected hardware and software add-ons till 31 December, 2004. Support will continue till 31 December, 2006, HP said. In addition, the company will provide software patches online after that.
HP 3000 customers, a loyal and passionate group, have banded to help each other out. A group called OpenMPE has formed to try to extend the usefulness of the 3000's operating system, called MPE.
The group is seeking to remove or publish system utility passwords, enable software companies to support MPE even after 2006, and allow the creation of an MPE emulator, for example.
The company has been working to keep HP 3000 customers within its fold by offering incentives to switch to other HP server lines. It said it believes "it has not lost a single customer throughout this transition."
However, IBM had a different opinion. It plans on Friday to announce several customers that switched to its servers from the 3000 line. Among them are Strauss Discount Auto and Lady Remington Jewelry, both of which opted to use IBM's iSeries midrange servers.






