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Throughout the rest of the 2000s up until the early 2010s, Gen3, Gen4, Gen5, Gen6, and Gen7 ProLiant servers were produced. In February 2012, HP announced the ProLiant Gen8. [5] In July 2013, HP announced a new blade server-based ProLiant, the HP Moonshot Server. The ProLiant DL580 Gen8 has been described as a "middle generation" between Gen8 ...
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.
BladeSystem is a line of blade server machines from Hewlett Packard Enterprise (Formerly Hewlett-Packard) that was introduced in June 2006. [1] [2] [3]The BladeSystem forms part of the HP ConvergedSystem platform, which use a common converged infrastructure architecture for server, storage, and networking products. [4]
The HP ConvergedSystem 300, designed to support 50 to 300 virtual machines, comes configured with HP ProLiant servers. The HP ConvergedSystem 700 is designed for larger enterprise installations of 100 to more than 1,000 virtual machines and comes configured with HP BladeSystem servers. [ 12 ]
Previous versions of HP CloudSystem combined HP Matrix Operating Environment, which manages, monitors and provisions servers for physical and virtual resources and HP Cloud Service Automation Software, a set of system management tools used to provide and manage the lifecycle of IT services.
The ProLiant line of servers was then acquired by Hewlett Packard Enterprise in 2015 after HP split up into two separate companies. Despite the ProLiant name being used on some of these entry-level servers listed below, they are based on HP's former NetServer line of servers from 1993–2002 (more specifically the tc series) and as such do not ...
It is a business-focused organization which works in servers, storage, networking, containerization software and consulting and support. The split was structured so that the former Hewlett-Packard Company would change its name to HP Inc. and spin off Hewlett Packard Enterprise as a newly created company.
The entire NetServer line initially competed with HP's own RISC-based 9000 line of workstations [3] as well as Compaq's ProLiant line of servers that were introduced around the same time, of which HP would ultimately acquire later on in 2002. Later entries in the NetServer line featured single or dual Pentium II and Pentium III processors. [4] [5]