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IBM’s new high-end server POWER8 50 times faster

File photo shows a worker behind a logo at the IBM stand on the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover

International Business Machines, in its latest attempt at reviving demand for its hardware products, is launching high-end system servers that it says are 50 times faster than its closest competitor at analyzing data.

The POWER8 servers, the product of a $2.4 billion, three-year investment, are part of the company’s decade-long shift to higher-value hardware technology. IBM said the machines are 50 times faster than the low-end x86-based servers it sold to Chinese PC maker Lenovo in January.

The technology services provider said it hopes the servers, designed for large-scale computing, will appeal to clients looking to manage new types of social and mobile computing and mass amounts of data.

Last week, the company reported its lowest quarterly revenue in five years, weighed down by falling demand for its storage and server products.

IBM dominates the higher-end server market with 57% market share, according to research firm Canalys.

“For IBM customers in particular the POWER8 represents a generational jump forward so far as overall performance and system capacity goes,” said Charles King, an analyst at Pund-IT in California.

“POWER8 should help IBM move forward in this very cloud-centric, analytic path that it has been working on,” he said.

Some analysts, however, say that IBM’s shift to high-end servers makes products like POWER8 appealing only to niche customers.

“Not every app needs a high-end server,” said Jefferies analyst Peter Misek. “With IBM getting out of that lower-end business, it dramatically shrinks their addressable market.”

In order to make the servers adaptable to different needs, IBM released the data specifications for its POWER8 processor to the OpenPOWER foundation, allowing the development community to deliver new system designs based on POWER8.

The foundation, whose more than two dozen members include Google, Israeli chip designer Mellanox Technologies , US chip-maker Nvidia and Taiwan-based server supplier Tyan Computer, will have access to hardware previously proprietary to IBM.

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