As internet traffic grows there are an increasing number of computer workloads that don't require the concentrated horsepower offered by a high-end server. Enter microservers: low-power servers ...
Microservers are cheap, weedy and diminutive servers. They are servers whose parts have been shrunk and scaled back, allowing them to be packed into clusters. Because not every computing task needs to ...
"Right now the bloom is on the hyperscale market, but if you read the tea leaves what we are seeing is a pivot to microservers," said Andrew Feldman, general manager and corporate vice president at ...