|
Larry,
I guess years back the older gear kept a higher trade value for the used
market, probably not case because things are changing so fast.
When our CE was here this week, he told me there still using/installing P4
in 3rd world countries.
I'm using 3 of the 8 for i5/OS. The other 5 are active cores, but no i5/OS
license.
BP originally tried selling me a 12-core, but I found it could be done
with an 8-core.
You almost have to be your own SE.
I see the issue with Power8 coming.
If you want the 11 PCI slots or the higher memory cap, which we probably
will, you need to buy more cores, ever though we will not license.
1 socket S814
§ 6-core
§ 8-core
2 socket S814
§ 6-core or 12-core
§ 8-core or 16-core
§ 24-core
Paul
-----Original Message-----
From: MIDRANGE-L [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
DrFranken
Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2014 4:25 PM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Re: No Power7 to Power8 MES upgrade option, entitlements, cores,
etc.
Aha, you are confusing the parts you purchased vs the parts that go back
to IBM in an MES. They can only count the stuff that comes back so
processor box (CEC) and CPUs and planar board and whatnot. All the stuff
you keep doesn't count and if you keep it that's because you perceive value
enough to keep it. That's why they can't get to the number.
I don't think you got snookered, sure some BPs aren't as honest as others
and some do 'creative' things to bend IBMs rules but when it comes to IRS
type things they can't really cheat that.
These days 1200 jobs are not really that much either. My lab server with
JUST ME and the *ADMIN server running (No printers either) has 207 jobs
running.
So at your next upgrade leverage this information to purchase fewer cores
to save money. Sadly you can't transfer those cores to anyone else.
- Larry "DrFranken" Bolhuis
www.frankeni.com
www.iDevCloud.com
www.iInTheCloud.com
On 4/30/2014 4:18 PM, Steinmetz, Paul wrote:
Larry,standpoint. I would like to see those IRS numbers.
I'm confused on the P7 to P8 that P7 would not qualify from IRS
Almost all my current P7 features will migrate to a P8, so thatstatement doesn't make sense.
So there stating that my current P7 value is less than 20% of 300,000transfers.
(60,000) Back when I went from P5 to P7, yes it did, nothing migrated.
So maybe we got snowed, or someone got a piece of one of our P5 to P7
Maybe P5 rules were different.different mix, more Java and more SQL, then yes.
As far as a 2nd processor being used, it amazes me too. I'm sure with a
I wish I could show you a MPG graph, cores used.have 5 active cores out of 8 sitting idle.
I questioned this with IBM and several others years back.
They said purchased processors that you really don't need.
There is no setting to force the usage of additional processors.
Does anyone have Power gear with active processors with no licenses. We
Can't really use those cores for anything?cores, etc.
Paul
-----Original Message-----
From: MIDRANGE-L [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
DrFranken
Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2014 3:55 PM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Re: No Power7 to Power8 MES upgrade option, entitlements,
return your old system it must retain 20% of it's initial value in order to
They are always working within the rules.
Jim is right on the IRS part. I believe the stated rule is that when you
qualify as an upgrade. They could not meet that standard with POWER7 to
POWER8 on the low end. Potentially on larger servers later as was also
mentioned.
forward. WHat was 'state of the art' just a few years ago is now below
This is really a statement of how fast the industry as a whole is moving
'ho-hum' in many cases.
be certain licenses that were part of the base box and as such were
As to IBM i licenses that rule hasn't really changed. Yes there used to
'welded' to that server. When you upgraded you could not transfer those
base licenses. Often this didn't really hurt much as the increase in CPW
per core has frequently meant that fewer cores were needed and in other
cases the drop in P-group more than made up for it.
'base' and so what you have should transfer to a new server.
With POWER7 and I believe PWOER6 as well there are no cores that are
ordinary for sure. Back when we installed the very first 2-core machine in
Your expectation that no more than one core is used is out of the
my customer base (a model 310) their constraint was single thread RPG batch
so we wondered if the second core would do anything. Turned out both cores
maxed right out, likely one running the RPG and the other doing I/O and DB
work plus the O/S code.
purchase, only 2 of our 3 i5/OS licenses would transfer. One had to stay
- Larry "DrFranken" Bolhuis
www.frankeni.com
www.iDevCloud.com
www.iInTheCloud.com
On 4/30/2014 3:46 PM, Steinmetz, Paul wrote:
Jim,
That's not totally true on transfers. When we went from P5 to P7, new
with the old box.
keep us at 3.So we had to anity up (44,000) and purchase anther i5/OS license to
cores, etc.
Paul
-----Original Message-----
From: MIDRANGE-L [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Jim Oberholtzer
Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2014 3:44 PM
To: 'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion'
Subject: RE: No Power7 to Power8 MES upgrade option, entitlements,
upgrade with a same serial number option. Reason: Internal Revenue
Keep in mind that IBM does not always have the ability to offer an
Service rules.
requires a new serial number so they can get their skin out of it in theIf the new asset is sufficiently more powerful than the old asset, IRS
new depreciation schedule. I think that is the situation with the current
batch of P8 boxes.
the new box and since that's the biggest dollar value of the deal (usually)
Even when the serial number changes, IBM will transfer your software to
it's not nearly as bad as it used to be.
etc.
--
Jim Oberholtzer
Chief Technical Architect
Agile Technology Architects
-----Original Message-----
From: MIDRANGE-L [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Steinmetz, Paul
Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2014 2:19 PM
To: 'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion'
Subject: No Power7 to Power8 MES upgrade option, entitlements, cores,
gave you an upgrade option, up to a point.
1) Is IBM doing away with MES upgrades?
No MES upgrade path from Power7 to Power8 Over the years, IBM always
machine would be quite a bit more, you lost all value from old machine.If you upgraded within that timeframe, you saved $$$$, if not, the new
90's) Also, on MES, all entitlements would transfer.This is what kept you current.
We had our same serial# for over 10 years from our original 510 (mid
machine, so you had to repurchase an additional entitlement to remain atOn a new machine, the base entitlement had to stay with the old
the same level.
increased.
9406 AS/400 RISC Series Processor was our original 510. (mid 90's)
9406 System Unit MES # 19262 from 510 to 640 upgrade. (2nd quarter
98)
9406 System Unit MES # N26616 from 640 to 830 upgrade. (2nd quarter
2001)
9606 System Unit MES # 129707-6 from 830 to 550 upgrade (3rd quarter
2005)
8205 new purchase - (1st quarter 2012)
S814 new purchase - TBD
2) Also related to number of cores.
We currently have an 8-core 8205, but only 3 cores licensed for i5/os.
The remaining 5 active cores are useless.
We needed to purchase them to get the 8205 features we needed.
I see the same issue, but only worse with Power8, number of cores has
processor allocated to an LPAR, and your running RPG or RPGIV, that 2ndAlso, not sure if many know this, but if you have more than 1 full
processor will probably never be used.
the 1st processor.RPG and RPGIV is all single threaded, most work will always only use
perception that more work will get done quicker, not the case.Way back on Power5, our BP sold us additional processors with the
a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l.
Thank You
_____
Paul Steinmetz
IBM i Systems Administrator
Pencor Services, Inc.
462 Delaware Ave
Palmerton Pa 18071
610-826-9117 work
610-826-9188 fax
610-349-0913 cell
610-377-6012 home
psteinmetz@xxxxxxxxxx<mailto:psteinmetz@xxxxxxxxxx>
http://www.pencor.com/
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