IBM this week will open a data center of NUMA-Q systems that
will be devoted to helping companies test and deploy
business-intelligence applications. By February, the NUMA-Q
line will be able to run IBM's flagship database, Universal
DB2; the systems already support Oracle and Informix
databases.
NUMA, or Non-Uniform Memory Access, is a hardware-software
combination that works with Intel or RISC processors and
overcomes some of the limitations of other symmetric
multiprocessor platforms. NUMA-Q servers running Sequent's
Dynix Unix, and eventually the forthcoming Monterey Unix
operating system, on Intel Xeon processors could emerge as
IBM's preferred platform for business-intelligence
applications. "NUMA-Q fits nicely for the high-end sweet
spot, starting at 500 Gbytes of data," says Dan Graham,
global solutions executive with IBM Global Business
Intelligence Solutions. IBM eventually plans to incorporate NUMA's memory-sharing
capabilities into its Windows NT Netfinity servers, PowerPC
RS/6000 line, and even the AS/400. But that won't happen
until 2001 at the earliest. In the meantime, IBM customers
will have to choose between the RS/6000 and NUMA-Q--not to
mention IBM's other server options--for data warehousing
projects. And IBM says it won't push NUMA-Q for data
warehousing until Windows 2000 is proven to be more scalable
than Windows NT. Analysts say adding NUMA to IBM's RS/6000 SMP systems will
be an important advance. It's "the last best hope for the
RS/6000," says Wayne Kernochan, Aberdeen Group senior VP. He
maintains that IBM has lost data warehouse business to HP
and Sun because of the gap between its RS/6000 SMP hardware
and its massively parallel RS/6000 SP system.
Boeing seeking Software Engineer 5 in Anaheim, CA
KForce seeking Inside Sales Associate in San Diego, CA
Amalgamated Bank seeking Chief Information Officer in New York, NY
Apollo College seeking Medical Billing and Coding Instructors in Albuquerque, NM
Allstate seeking Exlusive Agent in Las Vegas, NV
For more great jobs, career-related news, features and services, please visit our Career Center.
SIFMA: Low Latency Finally Comes Into Its Own
Financial firms need their data faster than ever before, and this year consumers (not just vendors) have finally understood the importance of low latency technology, according to TowerGroup Senior Analyst Tom Price....

NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.