The RS/6000 (for RISC System/6000), now System p5, is IBM's current RISC/UNIX-based server and workstation product line.
History
Announced in
1990, the RS/6000 replaced the
RT-PC.
This server family has undergone several name changes in its lifetime.
It was originally a line of workstations and servers called RS/6000. The server line was then renamed to the
eServer pSeries in 2000 as part of its e-Server branding initiative.
With the advent of the
POWER5 processor in 2004 the family was rebranded the
eServer p5.
Now with the global move of the server and storage brands to the
System brand with the Systems Agenda, the family has been renamed yet again to
System p5 in 2005.
The System p5 now encompasses the IBM
OpenPower product line.
Features
Its processors use the
IBM POWER and
PowerPC instruction set architectures and run the
AIX operating system and, more recently,
64-bit versions of the
Linux operating system.
All IBM System p5 and IBM eServer p5 machines support DLPAR (Dynamic Logical Partitioning) with Virtual I/O and Micro Partitioning.
Deep Blue
Deep Blue, an RS/6000 based
supercomputer, was the first computer system to win a chess game against a reigning world champion (
Garry Kasparov) under regular time controls. It is a massively parallel, 30-node, RS/6000,
SP-based computer system enhanced with 480 special purpose
VLSI chess processors. Its
chess playing program is written in the
C programming language and runs under the AIX operating system. It was capable of evaluating 100,000,000 positions per second.
See also
References
External links
IBM hardware | Server hardware | Computer workstations | PowerPC mainboards
RS/6000 | RS/6000 | RS/6000 | System p | RS/6000 | RS/6000