ClearCube PC Blade solutions review
Reviews Indeed, ClearCube has recently announced an agreement with IBM, which is to add Grid Center management to its VHCI (Virtualised Hosted Client Infrastructure) based on IBM’s BladeCenter hardware plus VMWare software and Citrix thin clients.
[November 16, 2005, 9:00]
ClearCube extends low-cost clustering
News ClearCube, the maker of high-performance blade systems, has introduced what it claims is a new blade and chassis that offer a lower-cost system for small to medium-sized companies. The new ClearCube blade, which is based on Intel quad-core...
[November 1, 2007, 13:44]
ClearCube launches first 'Vista blades'
News Two new blades with Pentium and Xeon dual-core processors, alongside new management software and virtualisation, should help cut the cost of deploying blade farms, according to ClearCube Technology. With the new blades, ClearCube is aiming to stay...
[June 26, 2006, 10:10]
ClearCube blades offer a bank in a box
News IBM is using ClearCube's blade technology to offer an enticing product that could be a cost effective solution for branch banking. Dubbed "Bank in a Box" there seems little reason why the IBM/ClearCube should not find its way into other areas of...
[November 16, 2005, 12:20]
ClearCube Technology Case Study: American Automobile Club (Kentucky)
White Papers AAA Kentucky replaced its traditional PCs with ClearCube's managed desktop solution. ClearCube takes traditional computing components and transforms them into a highly dense, rack-mounted blade computer.
[September 6, 2007, 1:00]
Interesting to compare HP and ClearCube
Talkback It is interesting that everyone compares HP and ClearCube when HP is strictly a thin-client solution and ClearCube can be either thick-client or thin-client. Cubix is the real competition for ClearCube on the thick-client front.
[December 5, 2006, 12:26]
Lenovo inks blade desktop deal
News Lenovo will resell blade desktop systems from ClearCube Technologies as the Chinese giant kicks off its effort to woo the international set. Under the deal, the two companies will cooperate to sell ClearCube's blade systems, initially to the...
[July 11, 2005, 9:15]
IBM aims blades at Japan
News IBM will sell blade PC systems from ClearCube Technology to customers in Japan, a deal that is likely to help build interest in the relatively new market. ClearCube pioneered the market and has installed Pentium-based blade systems contracts with...
[February 25, 2004, 10:05]
Blade software cuts desktop hassles
News Workstation start-up ClearCube has come out with two new applications that bring some of the advantages of blade computing to ordinary PCs. You no longer have to have an IT guy running around moving PCs," said Ken Knotts, director of marketing at...
[March 17, 2003, 14:33]
Blade PCs approach mass-market pricing
News Blade PC manufacturer ClearCube is releasing a product range that it says is priced to appeal to small and medium-sized businesses. ClearCube announced the launch of the A Series PC blades and a new desktop connector called the 8330 I/Port on Monday.
[October 2, 2006, 18:15]
Start-up brings 'blades' to the desktop
News ClearCube said several large companies are considering licensing or reselling elements of its technology. Now a start-up appropriately named ClearCube wants to send it back. These are union buildings," said ClearCube chief executive Mike Frost.
[September 23, 2002, 8:27]
Blades cut a dash in dual monitors
News ClearCube Technology, a company adapting space-saving blade server architecture for use with desktop PCs, is coming out with multi-monitor desktops, one of those design trends that just might finally take off.
[March 4, 2002, 10:50]
US air defenders choose Blade PCs
News The North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, is nearly finished converting from using standard desktop PCs to blade PCs from ClearCube Technology in its Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station (CMAFS), said Garland Garcia, network chief at...
[April 18, 2005, 8:55]
IBM mulls blade desktops
News Blade desktops were pioneered by US company ClearCube, which sells racks of blades, each one containing a motherboard, processor, memory and hard disk. ClearCube's solution has a small user port sitting on each desk, to which as many as four...
[September 22, 2004, 12:40]
Blade desktops need sharper competition
Leader ClearCube, the company that arguably created the blade desktop market, has enjoyed a relatively free ride until now. We've spoken to financial institutions who have been happy with their ClearCube blade desktop purchases.
[December 4, 2006, 17:27]
HP sharpens blade PC lines
News Austin, Texas-based ClearCube Technologies began promoting the concept in 2002 and has landed its blade PCs in several financial firms. The North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) has deployed a ClearCube system to agents who monitor the...
[November 8, 2005, 8:15]
HP wants to change desktops into blades
News So far, the market has largely been defined by start-up ClearCube. Although sales remain relatively small, several high-profile customers are testing out or installing ClearCube's PCs, including the North American Aerospace Defense Command and...
[May 6, 2003, 9:10]
Blade PCs: the ultimate managed desktops review
Reviews ClearCube's solution is built around a rack-mounted blade chassis There are two chassis types: the 3U R4300, which houses eight R-series blades, and the 6U A3000, which houses ten A-series blades — each blade being essentially a powerful PC.
[July 3, 2007, 11:44]
Very Poor Quality
Member Review Don't believe the hype, the clearcube sale guys are all knowing that these products are bad news on 9 out of 10 deployments with poor video, poor tech support, exploding power components and even worst they are aware of all these issues and...
[June 14, 2006, 12:41]
NCP embraces blade technology
News Using blade technology from ClearCube, NCP is bringing its operations into one centre in Croydon that will control the systems based in around 150 car parks spread across the UK. The ClearCube systems will use 67 blade servers as well as "10 or 12...
[April 23, 2007, 15:33]



