(Source: Business Wire)

Liquid
Computing, the leader in unified
computing infrastructure for today's dynamic data center, today
announced that it is working with Intel® to launch its new Liquid
Elements unified computing system on Intel® Server Systems with
Intel® Xeon® processors. Liquid Computing will work with VAR
channel partners and customers to begin delivering the solution to
market at the end of this quarter. The combined solution will be
demonstrated at the upcoming SC09 conference, November 14 -- 20 in
Portland, Oregon.
Until now, Liquid Computing has driven the unified computing market with
its LiquidIQ product, a fully integrated hardware and software-based
system that is proven to dramatically reduce the cost of managing IT
infrastructure through software control of servers, networking and
storage from a common interface.
With the introduction of Liquid Elements, Liquid Computing becomes the
first to deliver the power of unified computing across standards-based
data center infrastructure from leading brands. Initially, Liquid
Elements will support Intel® Server System SR1680MV rack servers and
NetApp® storage devices. The result is a complete "data center in a box"
that combines the cost-savings and management flexibility of unified
computing from Liquid Computing with the breakthrough processing speed,
memory and density of servers from Intel. The system is also designed to
cost effectively scale from the smallest through the largest of
implementations.
"We believe Liquid Computing's solution will help accelerate the
adoption of unified computing that applies an open, standards-based
approach," said David Brown, general manager of Channel Server Products
at Intel. "By addressing the significant issue of escalating cost and
complexity of infrastructure management, Liquid Elements on Intel-based
servers provides a powerful solution for the server OEMs and channel to
create dynamic and highly efficient data centers for their customers."
"With Liquid Computing's open approach to unified computing,enterprises
can leverage their existing data center vendor relationships and
investments,"said Zeus Kerravala, senior vice president, Yankee Group.