November 2001
HP advises transition plan from 3000
Recommendation includes five-year support guarantee, two more
years of new sales
Hewlett-Packard proposed a new chapter for its oldest
business computer on November 14, one that advises customers to
transition away from the HP e3000 over the next five years. The
announcement from 3000 division general manager Winston Prather and
marketing director Christine Martino included news of a confirmed
date for end of HP support and a halt of new sales in a little less
than two years time.
HP said it will stop selling new systems on Oct. 31,
2003, ending its distribution of more than three decades of the most
reliable business computer in the HP lineup. The companys
contract with North American distributor Client Systems - a company
doing business exclusively in the HP 3000 line - has been extended
for two more years. The computers will clearly be in service for
quite awhile after that date, however, as HP is promising full
customer support for the systems through the end of 2006.
This really is about concluding that its
time to advise customers of the long-term trend, said Prather.
It has nothing to do with cost savings or downsizing. This is
an advisory type of announcement.
HP briefed the NewsWire several days in advance of
the worldwide announcement to the general press. The announcement
included news that HP will provide free unlimited HP-UX licenses for
all customers who own the new A-Class and N-Class servers, and
transform those systems into equivalent HP 9000 computers. And in the
meantime, HP intends to continue selling the system, and upgrading it
with projects that have already been announced. It will present
papers and communicate with customers at Interex conferences during
2002, and continue its Webcast series with a January broadcast on
transition.
From a CSY perspective and a support
perspective, its business as usual for the next two
years, Martino said. Its time for customers start
their planning to move to a platform that will serve their businesses
better in the future. HP recommends that customers begin
transitioning off the HP 3000 to alternate HP platforms. HP
will be releasing an overview White Paper in the first of a series,
HP e3000 Migration Considerations, from its Web site.
More detailed white papers on transitions to HP-UX will be released
in the future.
Theres even a silver lining in the announcement
for some HP 3000 customers. The end of support date for MPE/iX 6.0
has been extended by six months to October, 2002, making it easier
for companies using the HP 3000 9x7 systems to remain on the
platform. HP stops support of that hardware in April, but software
support for the systems has been extended as part of the transition.
Series 939 and 959 system support has been extended to December of
2003.
The company is also notifying all of its customers on
current support contracts by letter. Prather said the division
started to brief its top-tier customers on November 9. They
were not surprised, and they really appreciated HP being able to tell
them what we see as the future role of the platform, he said.
At the same time they really love the platform, so there was
some sadness in transitioning from the platform. Prather said
these top-tier customers already have a multi-OS strategy, so
theyve been evolving their applications over time. It is a
stake in the ground, but the CIOs I talked to were appreciative of
hearing what the future holds.
No layoffs or downsizing in the CSY division is being
planned, nor are any additional technical development operations
going to be shifted away from the California 3000 labs. The product
has often been pointed to as a profitable part of the HP lineup, but
CSY officials said profits didnt enter into the decision to
stop selling the systems two years from now.
The end of the CSY division seemed even fuzzier,
despite its announcement of a date for the end of support. When
we get to the point where HP doesnt need a CSY organization to
support the 3000 customers, then we wouldnt have a
division, Prather said. We will staff the division to
make sure we have whatever resources we need to meet our commitments,
and we are committed through December, 2006. We will ensure from both
a CSY perspective as well as our support organization and field
support we have the staff we need.
HP will also be helping continue the transition after
the end of the support period. After that, [CSY] employees will
transfer to other businesses to continue the transition as
well, Prather said. HP hopes to capture HP 3000 business in its
NetServer and HP-UX platforms, but recognizes that competitors will
be targeting the customer base. We will need to earn their
business, Prather said.
HPs plans on database migration were less
specific at the announcement. Prather mentioned HP Eloquence, a
revision of the HP IMAGE database thats been running on HP 9000
servers for more than a year, as an option for companies migrating
their home-grown systems. Other customers should look to their
application providers, Prather said, for advice and support on how to
transition away from the platform. Martino and Prather said a
decline in the ecosystem surrounding the 3000 prompted
the move - and denied that the impending HP-Compaq merger had any
effect on the decision to write HPs last chapter in the 3000
community. CSY made the decision sometime after the last HP World
conference, according to Prather. The general manager, who has spent
his entire career managing technical and business advances for the
platform, said he was saddened by his decision.
Im sad, because Ive been involved
in this forever, he said. But I feel confident were
doing the right thing for customers. I can stand up in front of any
customer and explain why were doing this, Prather said.
Its a recognition in general that were not going to
be able to reverse the trends. Martino said sales have been
declining for the product, although the month of October, HPs
close of its fiscal year, was a record one in North America. She
added that the divisions staff has been going through
stages of grief over the decision. But despite
CSYs melancholy approach to the news, the division remains well
in place trying to sell new 3000s to the community over the next 24
months. The immediate future holds no changes for companies relying
on the system, HP said.
We picked these dates that well guarantee
availability for customers, and we dont have any plans to
review those dates. We knew that the next question customers would
ask is, How long will this be a safe environment?
Thats why we gave them these dates. As proof of
the safety, HP plans to continue with all of its announced
enhancements for the system except moving it to the IA-64 platform.
The ongoing PA-8700 project, which is delivering a chip that is
expected improve performance another 30 percent over current top
ends, will be delivered as promised. HP will also release new A-Class
systems during the next two years, offering a performance bump for
those low-end servers as well.
HP will also be releasing MPE/iX 7.5 next year,
although the future releases of the operating system will be limited
to Express updates beyond that, according to Prather. Native Fiber
Channel will still be released, along with support for the new
Ultrium tape systems and va7400 disk arrays. Possibilities of
selling the business to another company and helping to create an Open
Source movement to extend MPEs life still may hold some
potential for Prather. We have a very diverse set of
customers, he said, and in briefing our top-tier
accounts, this doesnt come up. I dont believe doing any
of that [Open Source] will change any of our recommendations for
customers. I feel strongly that the ecosystem is starting to erode,
and that right thing to do is move to another platform, hopefully an
HP platform.
But having said all that, we will try to
understand how we can help the evolution of MPE. If it is valuable to
customers, we want to understand how we can help them. Selling
the source code for the operating system, as HP once did for the
earlier generation of MPE, is also a possibility, but I want to
understand to who, and for what purpose.
In the meantime, HP expects that a lively market is
about to emerge around migration consulting and tools for the
platform. I have a feeling the third-party community will
spring to life quickly to develop tools to help with the migration. I
think a number of the partners in the ecosystem will look at this as
an opportunity. This could bring the ecosystem to life for the
transition period.
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