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HP Drops Itanium 2 Workstations

Move is the latest setback for the chip Intel once billed as an industry standard.

Robert McMillan, IDG News Service

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Hewlett-Packard has stopped selling workstations based on Intel's Itanium 2 microprocessor, a company spokesperson confirms.

Citing market conditions, the company ceased selling workstations based on the 64-bit processors on September 1, just two months after the first processor based on Intel's 64-bit architecture for x86 systems, called EM64T (extended memory 64 technology) 64-bit x86 architecture, began shipping.

"Basically this is a response to customer requirements in the workstation business," says Kathy Sowards, an HP spokesperson.

HP has been selling two Itanium workstations: the single-processor zx2000 and dual-processor zx6000 workstations, both of which were introduced in September 2002.

Suffering a Setback

HP's decision is a setback to the processor that Intel at one point billed as a future industry standard. In recent years, however, Intel executives positioned Itanium as an alternative to the RISC (reduced instruction set computer) processors sold by Sun Microsystems and IBM.

Sun, IBM, and HP, however, all continue to sell RISC-based workstations.

HP had been the only major company to sell workstations based on Itanium, says Erica Fields, an Intel spokesperson.

"The workstation market has never been our priority focus for Itanium. Our family of Xeon processors with Nocona and EM64T provides the best price performance for the workstation market," Fields says.

HP's decision is a further sign of the increasing dominance of PC systems in the high end of the workstation market, says Nathan Brookwood, an analyst with research firm Insight64 in Saratoga, California.

"What you have is this massive migration from RISC to x86 and x86 with 64-bit extensions," he says. "Now that Xeon has 64-bit capabilities, that will probably ice the cake."

Brookwood calls HP's decision "a little bit of a surprise," but "not a shock." Because there was only one major supplier of Itanium workstations, the company had difficulty in convincing sellers of high-end workstation software to port their applications to Itanium, he says.

HP will continue to provide support for the Itanium workstations until 2009, HP's Sowards says.

The decision to get out of the workstation business has no impact on HP's Itanium-based server products, Sowards says. "HP continues with successful Integrity server line," she says.

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