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Integrated Lights-Out, or iLO, is a proprietary embedded server management technology by Hewlett Packard Enterprise which provides out-of-band management facilities. The physical connection is an Ethernet port that can be found on most ProLiant servers and microservers [1] of the 300 and above series.
Starting August 28, 2014, HP ProLiant Gen9 series were available based on Intel Haswell chipset and DDR4 memory. [6] The first were the HP ProLiant ML350 Gen9 Server and HP ProLiant BL460c Gen9 Blade. Servers in this generation support both BIOS and UEFI. On November 1, 2015, HP split up into two separate companies, HP Inc., and HPE. As part of ...
During the POST, the BIOS must integrate multiple competing, changing, and even mutually exclusive standards and initiatives for the matrix of hardware and operating systems the PC is expected to support, although at most only simple memory tests and the setup screen are displayed.
After the acquisition by HP, the application was rebranded as HP Service Manager and was included in the HP OpenView product suite. HP offers the application as a service desk solution that enables IT to work as a single organization, governed by a consistent set of processes to handle service delivery and support quickly and efficiently. [2]
HPE SIM is the basis for the HPE system management tools and is part of HPE's unified infrastructure management strategy. Web-Based Enterprise Management were rolled into this product as of revision 5.6 with the ability to analyze the System Event Log. [1]
In August 2013, HP announced that HP TRIM would be integrated into a unified platform called HP Records Manager 8.0. In June 2016, HP Records Manager 8.0 was released as HP Content Manager 9. [ 2 ] HP Content Manager is built on the code base of HP TRIM and includes capabilities from the Autonomy Records Manager and Autonomy Meridio. [ 3 ]
HP bought Yokogawa Electric's share of Hewlett-Packard Japan in 1999. [19] HP spun off the small company Dynac to specialize in digital equipment. The name was picked so that the HP logo could be turned upside down to be a reflected image of the logo of the new company. Dynac was eventually renamed Dymec and folded back into HP in 1959. [20]
A diagnostic program (also known as a test mode) is an automatic computer program sequence that determines the operational status within the software, hardware, or any combination thereof in a component, a system, or a network of systems.