Year 2000 readiness
The currently marketed RS/6000 models and
versions of AIX contained in this document are Year 2000 ready. That is, when used in
accordance with their associated documentation, they are capable of correctly processing,
provid- ing, and/or receiving date data between the 20th and 21st centuries provided all
other products (for example, software, hardware, and firmware) used with them properly
exchange date data.IBM services
IBM services provide the capabilities and solutions you need to manage virtually every
aspect of your open systems environment-and at any level you choose. These services
complement the support already included with your RS/6000 system. IBM world-class services
and support allow you to better manage your resources and focus on what matters most╨your
business. IBM customer financing provides an additional incentive. An array of attractive
and flexible financing programs eases the acquisition of new technology and helps protect
you from the risk of obsolescence. Financing may be available to credit-qualified
customers. Rates are based on credit rating, financing terms, and other options. Other
restrictions may apply.
Project support services
* Operating system porting/conversion
* Operating system migration assistance
* Systems integration
* IBM and non-IBM software customization
* IBM application development
* Site planning services |
Continuing support
services
* Customer Support Center services
- Electronic/voice
- IBM and non-IBM hardware and software
* On-site software maintenance support
* Capacity planning
* Maintenance services, including multivendor environment
* Technical/application specialists
* Network custom services
* EducationBenchmark notes:
Values shown in the performance benchmarks section were
derived using particular, well configured, development-level computer systems, and used
32-bit applications and external cache if external cache is supported on the system. All
performance benchmark values and estimates are provided ╥AS IS╙ and no warranties or
guarantees are expressed or implied by IBM. Actual system performance may vary and is
dependent upon many factors including system hardware configuration and software design
and configuration. IBM recommends application-oriented testing for performance
predictions. Additional information about the performance benchmarks, values, and systems
tested is available from your IBM marketing representative or IBM Authorized Reseller or
access the following on the Web:
SPEC/GPC http://www.specbench.org
TPC http://www.tpc.org
Unless otherwise indicated, new or updated system benchmarks were
conducted using AIX Version 4.2.1.
tpmC: TPC Benchmark C throughput measured as the average number of
transactions processed per minute during a valid TPC-C** configuration run of at least
twenty minutes.
$/tpmC: TPC Benchmark C price-performance ratio reflects the
estimated five year total cost of ownership for system hardware, software, and maintenance
divided by the tpmC for the system. |
QppD is the power metric of
TPC-D and is based on a geometric mean of the 17 TPC-D queries, the insert test and the
delete test. It measures the ability of the system to give a single user the best possible
response time by harnessing all available resources. QppD is scaled based on database size
from 30GB to 1TB. QthD is the throughput metric of TPC-D and
is a classical throughput measure characterizing the ability of the system to support a
multi-user workload in a balanced way. A number of query users is chosen, each of which
must execute the full set of 17 queries in a different order. In the background, there is
an update stream that runs a series if insert/delete operations. QthD is scaled based on
the database size from 30GB to 1TB.
$/QpdD: Price-performance metric for the TPC-C benchmark where QpdD
is the geometric mean of QppD and QthD. The price reflects the estimated five year cost of
ownership for the tested hardware configuration, software and maintenance.
Relative OLTP performance: Estimate of commercial processing
performance derived from an IBM analytical model which simulates some of the system╒s
operations such as CPU, cache and memory. The model does not simulate disk or network I/O
operations. Although general database and operating system parameters are used, the model
does not reflect specific databases or AIX version or releases. The model assumes the use
of 32-bit applications. An IBM RS/6000 Model 250 is the baseline reference system and has
a value of 1.0. Although Relative OLTP may be used to compare estimated RS/6000 commercial
processing performance, actual system performance may vary and is dependent upon many
factors, including system hardware configuration and software design and configuration.
All performance estimates are provided "AS IS" and no
warranties or guarantees are expressed or implied by IBM. Buyers should consult other
sources of information, including system benchmarks, to evaluate the performance of a
system they are considering. |