Computerworld

HP to scrap e3000 server line

Hewlett-Packard, struggling in the distressed marketplace and facing an uphill battle to acquire Compaq, yesterday announced that it's discontinuing the decades-old HP e3000 server line.
  • Lee Copeland (Unknown Publication)
  • 15 November, 2001 22:00

          Hewlett-Packard, struggling in the distressed marketplace and facing an uphill battle to acquire Compaq, yesterday announced that it's discontinuing the decades-old HP e3000 server line.

          HP launched the 3000 series server in 1972. Facing eroding market share for the midrange server line in recent years, officials decided to phase out the proprietary platform and emphasise its HP-UX, Windows and Linux operating systems. The HP e3000 runs on the MPE/IX proprietary operating system.

          Winston Prather, general manager of HP e3000 business, says HP will continue to sell and enhance the HP e3000 until October 2003 and provide support services for the platform until December 2006.

          The demise of the HP e3000 series is no surprise because proprietary or specialised operating environments have lost favour with customers in recent years, says Rich Partridge, vice president of enterprise servers at DH Brown Associates, a market research firm in Port Chester, New York.

          "While MPE added IX at the end [of its name] to say it added Unix-type APIs and to say it looks a lot like Unix, many people decided they wanted to go all the way to Unix," Partridge says. "For new applications, they want to pick among standardized platforms and need [proprietary systems] less."

          HP considered scrapping the HP e3000 several years ago but decided to overhaul the platform instead in 1999. HP added support for the faster 240-MHz, PA-RISC 8200 processor and support for the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol.

          "There had been a big push a couple years ago to shut it down," says a senior systems programmer at a pharmaceutical retailer, who asked not to be named. "It didn't work, so we held on. We have to do something obviously now but aren't sure what that is at this point."

          "I think this is the real deal," says Ron Horner, HP 3000 systems administrator at JC Penny. "It's just a matter of when we hear something officially." Horner says HP's five-year transition plan gives the Plano, Texas-based retailer ample time to transition to another HP operating system.

          Transformix Computer in Oceanside, California, and Sector7 USA in Austin, Texas, for example, both provide migration services for the MPE operating environment.

          HP says it would provide trade-in credits and discounts to HP e3000 customers that purchase HP-UX, Windows or Linux replacement machines.

          Horner says rumours of the HP e3000's demise have been circulating on internet newsgroups for several weeks. One such site, posted a letter about the discontinuation, dated today, and signed by Prather and Jim Murphy, general manager of HP server support.

          But users say its not over until it's over.

          "There have been attempts in the past by HP to get the 3000 off market," says Horner. "At the last minute, someone always snatches it from the pit of fire."

          But Partridge says HP's planned merger with Compaq may have less to do with scrapping the e3000 than the economic slump. "At some point, HP focused its development dollars elsewhere," he says. "This is an overall review of HP investments, triggered by the economy softening and coupled with that, they're reviewing key, critical components and things that will lead HP forward in the next few years."