The 7 Most Important Things To Know About Dell EMC's New 14G PowerEdge Servers
Down To The Bedrock
The latest generation of the PowerEdge server portfolio that Dell EMC unveiled at the Dell EMC World conference in May has finally hit the market. Most of it, at least. Five of the seven models in the new line become available this week while customers will have to wait until later in the year for two.
Dubbed 14G, the fourteenth generation of the venerable PowerEdge line launches in lockstep with the release of Intel's new Xeon Scalable processors. Of course, that means PowerEdge 14G has plenty of competition, including Lenovo's rebranded ThinkSystem server line, which was introduced last month and also relies on Intel's latest processors
Dell EMC intends 14G to be "the bedrock of the modern data center," and the portfolio will underpin a wide variety of Dell EMC systems, including the popular VxRail hyper-converged infrastructure offering, which hits the market with a starting price of about $25,000.
Clearly, Dell EMC is intent on pushing growth in the server market as it consolidates. Dell EMC was the only major server vendor to show server revenue growth in the first quarter as the worldwide market declined nearly 5 percent, according to research firm IDC.
Click through to see the most important aspects of the new PowerEdge 14G line.
The Foundation
Dell EMC shipped more than 465,000 servers in the first quarter, and part of its strategy for growing that number is making PowerEdge the basis for a broad selection of Dell EMC solutions. The new 14G servers will be the foundation of offerings that used the previous generation of PowerEdge servers, including VxRail appliances, VxRack systems, the Nutanix-based XC hyper-convergence offering, vSAN ReadyNodes, ScaleIO ReadyNodes, IsilionSD Edge and Elastic Cloud Storage. PowerEdge servers will also be available in several new Dell EMC offerings, including the Data Domain Appliance, CloudArray, Ready Bundles, Ready Systems Dell EMC Enterprise Hybrid Cloud, Dell EMC Native Hybrid Cloud and Dell EMC Cloud For Microsoft Azure Stack.
Traditional To Software-Defined
The new PowerEdge is part of what Dell EMC calls scalable business architecture, a system that allows customers to move from traditional to virtualized to cloud-native workloads in software-defined data centers more easily. The 14G portfolio is optimized for NVMe to help speed the deployment of software-defined data center and hyper-converged infrastructure with faster database and storage performance and faster migration of VMs. The company also says life-cycle management is easier and problems will be resolved nearly twice as fast as in the past through Dell EMC's ProSupport and Support Assist programs.
On Lockdown
Dell EMC counts security as one of the major selling points of its servers, and 14G continues that with cryptographically trusted booting, which includes Intel Boot Guard protection, signed firmware and automatic BIOS recovery, among other features. The PowerEdge portfolio also includes System Lockdown, which helps secure any system configuration from malicious or unintended changes and alerts users to any attempt to make system changes. The new servers also come with System Erase, which allows users to retire or repurpose 14G servers by quickly wiping data from storage devices and embedded memory.
The Machines
The PowerEdge R640 is billed as striking a balance between dense, scale-out data center computing and storage in a 1U, two-socket platform. The R740 is the line's workhorse server for demanding environments that depend on storage, I/O and application performance. It also comes in a 1U, two-socket platform. Both the R640 and R740 are available now.
Bigger Machines
The R740XD is a 2U, two-socket server designed for optimum storage performance and density for software-defined storage, cloud service providers, big data and co-location hosting. The R740XD is available now.
Mission-Critical Machines
The R940 is a 3U, four-socket platform designed for demanding, mission-critical workloads like ERP systems, e-commerce and large databases. Dell EMC says the R940 can pave the way for significant Oracle licensing cost savings and offers significantly increased performance in SAP environments. The R940 is available now.
High-Performance Machines
The M640 and FC640 are modular servers designed for high-performance computing in dense, scalable environments. The C6420 is aimed at high-performance computing and maximizes density, scalability and energy efficiency. The M640 and FC640 will be available later this year, and will come in blade and modular platforms. The C6420 comes in a 2U, eight-socket form factor and is available now.