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The IBM XIV Storage System was a line of cabinet-size disk storage servers.The system is a collection of modules, each of which is an independent computer with its own memory, interconnections, disk drives, and other subcomponents, laid out in a grid and connected together in parallel using either InfiniBand (third generation systems) or Ethernet (second generation systems) connections.
The IBM XIV Storage System was configured as cabinet-size solution and designed to work well in cloud and virtualized environments. The last XIV Gen3 model offers 2, 3, 4 or 6 TB drives, providing up to 485 TB of usable capacity per rack.
With two generations of FlashSystem A9000 now in the market, the 415 model and the 425 model, IBM on February 27, 2018 announced the end of marketing for the XIV storage systems models 214 and 314, commonly known as "XIV Gen3". They listed the replacement product as the A9000 model 425.
April 2012 – IBM sells its Retail Store Solutions division (Point-of-Sales) to Toshiba TEC [223] January 2014 – IBM sells its IBM System x business to Lenovo for $2.3 billion. [224] October 2014 – IBM sells its Microelectronics (semiconductor) branch to GlobalFoundries. IBM will pay GlobalFoundries $1.5 billion over 3 years to take over ...
Formerly an IBM brand, Lenovo acquired the ThinkCentre desktop brand following its purchase of IBM's Personal Computing Division (PCD) in 2005. Following its acquisition of IBM's PCD, Lenovo has released M-series desktops in multiple form factors, ranging from traditional tower, small form factor, to ultra small form factor, and all-in-ones (AIOs).
The analyst writes that IBM’s successful shift to a software-focused company has been overlooked and forecasts revenue and margin growth to surpass consensus.
IBM Storwize systems were virtualizing RAID computer data storage systems with raw storage capacities up to 32 PB. [2] Storwize is based on the same software as IBM SAN Volume Controller (SVC). Formerly Storwize was an independent data storage organisation.
This list of early third generation computers, tabulates those computers using monolithic integrated circuits (ICs) as their primary logic elements, starting from small-scale integration CPUs (SSI) to large-scale integration CPUs (LSI).