4TH
ANNUAL eWEEK EXCELLENCE AWARDS
Server Hardware
IBM - WINNER
eServer Bladecenter
IBM’s
eServer BladeCenter emerged as the winner in the Server Hardware
category by providing impressive server blade density in a
scalable, resilient chassis while offering flexible hardware
support and comprehensive management capabilities.
The BladeCenter effectively integrates servers, networking,
storage and management in a compact and scalable package,
thus offering enterprise IT managers a robust infrastructure
building block suitable for server consolidation efforts at
midsize and large enterprises.
The Bladecenter’s unmatched blade density is impressive.
It delivers the best processor density and performance in
it’s class, supporting as many as 14 two-way Intel Corp.
Xeon blades or seven four-way Xeon blades in a 7U (12.25 inch)
chassis. In addition, IT Managers have the option of outfitting
the BladeCenter with dual PowerPC processor blades, revving
up the BladeCenter to tackle 64-bit computing.
The BladeCenter provides strong system management and reliability
as well. The included IBM Director Software and optional Remote
Deployment Manager Software ease system management, and redundancy
features such as the high-availability midplane provide dual
connectivity for all modular components.
The BladeCenter adheres to industry-standard technologies,
supporting Layer 2-7 Gigabit Ethernet switching and Fibre
Channel interconnects for SAN fabrics. It supports Windows,
Linux and Novell operating environments.
Article
WINNERS ARE CHOSEN ON HOW WELL THEY SOLVE PROBLEM
written by Peter Coffee: Epicenters
Now making their fourth annual appearance, the eWeek Excellence
Awards have become the gold standard for recognizing value
in enterprise infrastructure innovation. Considering only
products and services that are genuinely new and genuinely
available, each year’s screening of hundreds of entries
produces a valuable shopping list not only a guide to what’s
good butalso an up-to-date recommendation as to what’s
relevant to changing IT needs.
Two things make these awards unique among IT product honors.
First, the Excellence Awards program is not a popularity contest.
Year to year, the lists of finalists and winners include both
established leaders and startups. We’re always pleased
to find a category defining product coming from a company
that can hold an all-hands meeting in a full-size SUV.
At the same time, though, this year’s slate of honorees
reminds us that there’s world-class innovative talent
at big-name IT companies—companies that are often impugned
as being too concerned with stretching product life cycles
rather than daring to compete against themselves. No single
company has previously won more than two Excellence Awards
trophies in a single year. This year IBM and Microsoft each
earned three—and did so by addressing impressively diverse
needs.
That very diversity represents a challenge to our evaluation
teams. We don’t begin with a preconceived list of specific
product types, such as firewalls or development environments.
Rather, we look for novel and meaningful contributions on
15 different tiers of the IT stack, with competition open
to products and services addressing each general area of need.
We choose winners based on the contribution they make to solving
the problems of today, not on checklists of features or on
performance according to narrowly focused benchmarks.
Our past choices have been validated in numerous ways. Two
of our first-year Excellence Awards winners came from Great
Plains Software and Rational Software, which were subsequently
acquired by Microsoft and IBM, respectively. Both companies’
talents now reinforce their acquirers’ expanding platforms:
Great Plains, with its skill in selivering big-company IT
power on a midsize budget, and Rational, with its core competence
in software quality.
One of this year’s finalists, Logic-Library’s
Logidex, has been chosen by IBM to play an important role
in delivering component-based solutions. We take pride in
identifying the distinctive potential of nascent IT providers,
especially when others subsequently place their own bets on
those same contenders. One common characteristic among many
excellence Awards winners is the ability to slash complexity
and contain technical risk within enterprise environments.
We get a strong reality check in this area from our eWeek
Corporate Partner Advisory Board members, whose input during
judging is the second unique and defining feature of the program.
Each honoree reflects the judges’ need to simplify their
lives by finding and deploying products that play nicely with
others. An ironic example is this year’s Enterprise
Storage category winner, AppIQ’s StorageAuthority Suite.
Its multivendor support was the distinguishing strength and
the highest-priority area of improvement identified by our
enterprise pros.
We made a daunting commitment when we dubbed our inaugural
awards program the “first annual.” That debut
demanded a quantum jump in our product evaluation processes.
Building and deploying Web sites for both entry and judging,
coordinating teleconference briefings with product teams and
users, and assembling the results at a weekly newspaper pace
proved challenging.
Now in its fourth iteration, the process has found its groove.
It has become part of our annual routine to investigate several
hundred complex products, combining our own evaluative expertise
with that of vendor and user technologists and managers to
dig beneath the breathless prose of press releases, white
papers and product brochures.
We’re pleased to share the results.
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