Enterprise Computing: HP Blades Day – Lab Session – Part III
This is part of a series of posts with video recorded at the HP Blades Day in Houston, February 2010. Previous posts:
This is another post for the hardware geek in you. James Singer discusses fans; air moving devices is you’re familiar with the IBM lingo. You’d think fans weren’t that important, but in the C7000 chassis, they are super efficient. In fact, they were designed with the assistance of model aeroplane experts. A quick word of warning; this clip is a little noisy towards the end, when James demonstrates the fan’s power.
Enjoy!
Subscribe to Architecting IT
Popular Posts
- Netapp: The Inflexibility of Flexvols (9,909)
- Windows Server 2012 (Windows Server “8″) – Storage Spaces (9,349)
- Enterprise Computing: Why Thin Provisioning Is Not The Holy Grail for Utilisation (7,813)
- Comparing iSCSI Targets – Microsoft, StarWind, iSCSI Cake and Kernsafe – Part I (5,787)
- Review: Compellent Storage Center – Part II (5,402)
- Data ONTAP 8.0 – Part III (5,045)
- Why Does Microsoft Hyper-V Not Support NFS? (4,820)
- Back to Blogging (4,450)
- How To: Enable iSNS Server in Windows 2008 (4,288)
- Windows Server 2012 (Windows Server “8″) – Virtual Fibre Channel (4,099)
Daily Popular
- HUS VM – Hitachi’s New Midrange Baby (12)
- How To: Enable iSNS Server in Windows 2008 (10)
- ViPR – Frankenstorage Revisited (8)
- Booting from PCIe SSD – Do We Need It? (5)
- Windows Server 2012 (Windows Server “8″) – Storage Spaces (5)
- Comparing iSCSI Targets – Microsoft, StarWind, iSCSI Cake and Kernsafe – Part I (4)
- Enterprise Computing: Why Thin Provisioning Is Not The Holy Grail for Utilisation (3)
- Drive Prices Increase – Who Will Suffer Most? (3)
- IBM to Acquire StorWize (3)
- Virtualisation: DroboPro – Hyper-V’s Best Friend! (3)









