HP ditches high-profile utility computing project

Changes tact after few customers installed UDCÂ…

By Michael Kanellos, 28 September 2004 09:50

NEWS Hewlett-Packard is getting rid of one of its high-profile utility-computing projects, though much of the technology will live on in other initiatives.

The company has decided to discontinue its Utility Data Centre (UDC) package, designed to let administrators pool servers and storage systems so that tasks can be shifted as demands shift.

Although UDC was one of the more notable early examples of the concept of utility computing, the entire system cost millions of dollars to implement. As a result, few customers ever installed it, HP representative Don Gentile said.

HP has decided to offer many of the tools in UDC for managing servers or distributing computing power as software modules. Some of the UDC tools, for instance, are now part of HP's BladeSystem for controlling blade servers.

"The vision doesn't change, but the approach does," Gentile said.

With the shift, HP is cutting some jobs. The total number will come to less than 200, Gentile said. In its most recent quarterly conference call, HP said it would continue to adjust its operations. The company stunned investors in August, when it announced lower-than-expected revenue and earnings.

The shortfall was caused by "unacceptable execution" in the enterprise computing segment, HP CEO Carly Fiorina said at the time. In response, HP entered another corporate reorganisation. Other adjustments could follow, Gentile said.

Michael Kanellos writes for CNET News.com

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