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  1. The original Xserve and Xserve (Slot Load) include four hard drive bays at the front of the server; Xserve (Cluster Node) includes just one drive bay. Drives come as modules attached to carriers; they are removed from or installed in the server as a unit. Note: Blank drive carriers, which may fill some of the hard drive bays, follow the same
  2. Apple showed off its recently introduced Xserve cluster configuration at this week's Bio-IT World Conference & Expo in Boston. MacCentral reports on a technology showcase that was led by Doug Brooks, Apple's product manager of server hardware, who discussed the Xserve. Following Brooks' presentation, Dr. William Van Etten of The BioTeam gave a presentation entitled Scalable Informatics for the ...
  3. en.wikipedia.org

    A small Xserve cluster with an Xserve RAID and APC UPS. The Xserve is a discontinued series of rack-mounted servers that was manufactured by Apple Inc. between 2002 and 2011. It was Apple's first rack-mounted server, [1] and could function as a file server, web server or run high-performance computing applications in clusters - a dedicated cluster Xserve, the Xserve Cluster Node, without a ...
  4. apple-history.com

    Released in March of 2003, the Xserve Cluster Node was designed to function as a node in a cluster of xserves. It shipped without an optical drive or graphics card, and supported only a single ATA hard drive. ... and supported only a single ATA hard drive. The Xserve Cluster Node shipped with dual 1.33 GHz processors, and was priced at $2,799 ...
  5. theregister.com

    Tue 18 Mar 2003 // 22:07 UTC ... Apple has introduced a version of its Xserve rackmount server aimed at customers seeking to build computing clusters. The Cluster Node Xserve is based on two 1.33GHz PowerPC G4 processors, each with 256KB on-die L2 cache and 2MB of backside L3 cache, a base 256MB of 333MHz DDR SDRAM, a 60GB ATA-133 hard drive ...
  6. nonstrict.eu

    Since its launch Xserve has been hailed as a remarkably easy to use, powerful, and scalable solution for cross-platform environments. Dig in and learn what it takes to plan and manage a successful deployment, including Xserve's value proposition, how to manage for best TCO, and special considerations such as backup, clustering, failover, and high-availability configurations.
  7. theapplewiki.com

    G5 Cluster Node on everymac.com; Software. First Release: Mac OS X Panther Server (10.3) Last Release: Mac OS X Leopard Server (10.5.8) Identifiers. Model Identifiers: RackMac3,1; G5/G5 Cluster Node (2005) Various. Release Date: 4 January 2005 () Tech Specs: G5 on everymac.com; G5 DP on everymac.com; G5 Cluster Node on everymac.com; Software

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