Apple Turns To Xeon For Xserve
News On Monday, Apple took another step into the mainstream server market with the launch of the Xserve for Intel. This new Xserve is a 1U form factor server that offers up to 2.2TB of storage. Apple launched its first Xserve product in 2002, when it...
[August 8, 2006, 13:30]
Apple Servers Take On A New Form
News Apple Computer on Tuesday unveiled Xserve, its first rack-mountable server. Although the machines are aimed at environments where Macs are plentiful -- places like schools and graphics departments -- the Xserve is also designed to be a good server...
[May 15, 2002, 8:42]
Apple Tempts With Clustered Servers
News Some Apple customers have been building computing clusters on their own out of Apple's existing dual-processor Xserve systems, but Apple removed some elements of the general-purpose model to cut the price and increase the appeal of the new...
[March 19, 2003, 7:50]
Apple Delays Xserve Storage Unit
News The Xserve RAID, which Apple had promised to deliver by the end of this year, will not make the deadline, according to a posting on Apple's Web site. We've received an overwhelming thumbs-up on our Xserve 1U rack-mount server from customers and...
[November 22, 2002, 7:53]
Apple Takes Its RAID To New Heights
News The Xserve RAID shared storage system has 14 independent 500GB Ultra ATA drive channels, and has throughput of 385Mbps through dual independent RAID controllers, each with 512MB cache. The 1U Xserve server can process at speeds of up to 35...
[September 14, 2005, 17:40]
Apple Serves Up New G5
News After a month delay, Apple Computer has begun shipping a single-processor version of its Xserve G5 server, and plans a dual-processor version in April. The Xserve G5 is an all-new version of the "1U," or 1.75-inch-thick, rack-mount Apple server.
[March 23, 2004, 15:30]
IBM Smoothes Out Server Connections
News The space is so hot that even Apple has made a recent entry, with its rack-mounted Xserve machine. IBM on Friday unveiled new technology that aims to simplify how servers are installed by cutting through the mess of connecting cables.
[July 22, 2002, 10:01]
