A number of Australian employees of Hewlett-Packard are facing the loss of their jobs as the global computer giant looks to slash its worldwide workforce by up to 30,000.
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Alex Zaharov-Reutt
Tuesday, 27 March 2007 08:47
When we asked about competitors, Manzoori explained that it could take years for the competition to come up with a similar system, which would also eat into their shared hosting customers. Manzoori also explained that there is also an API for resellers who can offer it via a white label solution to their own clients, and that it is built on an open platform, with PHP, MySQL, Pearl and more all supported. He also told us that the word has been spreading despite being in a trial up until now, with calls coming from overseas from interested customers wanting to sign up.
Manzoori said the company plans to invest millions of dollars into a super computer in over the next 12-18 months, which will have the equivalent memory and storage of 10,000 desktop PC’s. “We are also taking on new staff and will have a virtual IT team of 20 people to sell and support the solution,” said Manzoori.
Vigabyte say that the commercial launch of the Australian business will be shortly followed by expansion into the US market. Vigabyte already leases hosting capacity in the United States, allowing it to easily turn on the service in that market. Vigabyte’s parent company is Smartyhost, the number two web hosting player in Australia, with 30,000 customers. Smartyhost is also one of the leading domain name registrar in Australia.
Vigabyte is built on high capacity infrastructure, deploying a mix of Sun Microsystems storage area network hardware and servers and VMware virtualisation software. The Vigabyte server network is housed at the Optus data centre in Melbourne. The virtualisation software offering includes services such as business continuity, high availability, distributed resource scheduling, and VMotion. Vigabyte customers can use any operating system, including Linux, Solaris and Windows.
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