Blade PCs are a form of client or Personal Computer. A personal computer ( PC) is any Computer whose original sales price size and capabilities make it useful for individuals and which is intended to be operated In conjunction with an access device they accomplish many of the same functions of a traditional PC, but they also take advantage of many of the architectural achievements pioneered for blade server. Blade servers are self-contained/ all inclusive computer servers, designed for high density
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Like traditional PCs, blade PCs have a CPU, RAM and a Hard Drive. They may or may not have an integrated graphics solution. Some can support multiple Hard Drives. They are in a “blade” form that plugs into an enclosure. The enclosures offered by current blade PC vendors are similar but not identical; most have moved the power supplies, cooling fans and some management capabilities from the blade PC to the enclosure. Up to 14 enclosures can be placed in one industry standard 42U rack.
All blade PCs support one or more common operating systems (for instance Microsoft has created a “blade PC” version of their XP and Vista Business operating systems specifically for use on these blade PCs). Importantly, these solutions are intended to support 1 user per discrete device. This is a major difference from Server Based Computing, which supports multiple users simultaneously using an application hosted on one discrete server (be it a discrete piece of hardware or a discrete Virtual Machine on a discrete piece of HW server).
Access to the device is usually achieved via Microsoft’s Remote Desktop Protocol, which allows users to log on to the blade PC via a client device (usually a thin client). Remote Desktop Protocol ( RDP) is a multi-channel protocol that allows a user to connect to a computer running Microsoft Terminal Services. A thin client (sometimes also called a lean or slim client) is a client computer or client software in Client-server architecture networks Once logged on the end user experience is largely the same as if they were logged on to a local PC. MS RDP has been available for many years, is free to download and is proven effective for most circumstances. It is less effective at delivering multimedia, in part because the audio and video are not synchronized, so in circumstances where there is increasing latency, there is a proportional decrease in the quality of the end user experience. There are other protocols available with various advantages and disadvantages relative to MS RDP. All protocols, it should be noted, are negatively impacted by increasing latency between the end user’s access device and the blade PC. One of the biggest challenges the blade PC vendors have experienced is how to minimize the impact of latency and deliver an end user experience comparable to that offered by a traditional PC, and there has been a number of new entrants in this sub-category of the blade PC in 2007.
IDC recognizes Blade PCs as a category separate from other types of PCs and has begun issuing forecasts for blade PCs.
ClearCube [1], a small privately held company based in Austin, Texas, gets credit for creating and popularizing the category. Started in the late 1990s, they have been very aggressive promoting the concept especially in the United States and in vertical markets such as Financial Traders, Hospitals and national defense organizations. ClearCube’s blade PCs tend to be built with high-end desktop components. In addition to MS RDP, ClearCube offers a proprietary access protocol, although it has an approximately 200m distance limit between the end user and the blade PC. ClearCube currently offers a PCoverIP protocol, where there is no distance limitation. The user port connects desktop peripherals to a centralized blade PC over a standard Ethernet network. Therefore, the distance between the user and their blade is unlimited. ClearCube offers four blade PC families with varying features between them.
HP was second to the category with the 2004 announcement of their “Consolidated Client Infrastructure” [2]in North America, which is a solution built around their version of the blade PC. In contrast to ClearCube, HP emphasized density while minimizing power consumption, which resulted in the ability to put far more blade PCs in an industry standard 42U rack (up to 280). HP’s first offering, however, was a Transmeta-based solution, which offered only a marginal end user experience. HP has since migrated to AMD-based blade PCs. While maintaining the same density HP has taken advantage of improvements in low power CPU performance, and they have recently announced two new blade PCs, to include a very low power dual-core version. HP is obviously a much larger organization than ClearCube and can offer a more comprehensive solution to include their own Thin Clients, servers, management tools, etc. HP has been slowly increasing the geographic availability of their solution around the world. Like the other blade PC vendors, HP offers MS RDP with their solutions, and they have announced availability of another protocol called Remote Graphic Software that has some advantages over MS RDP, espeically in regard to delivery of three-dimensional and streaming content.
In addition to ClearCube and HP, Hitachi has offered a blade PC of their own in Japan. There seems to have been little emphasis on the solution. And it is reportedly only available in Japan. There does not seem to have been any enhancements since it was first introduced in 2005. Though more like the CCI solution than the ClearCube solution, it is less dense and suffers from having all cabling out of the front of the blade PC.
Cubix [3]presents themselves as offering a blade PC. Cubix Robots for Everyone ( Korean Hangul: 큐빅스) is a South Korean CGI animated series created by Cinepix. They are also based in the US and are privately held. Their solution is more like the ClearCube solution – which is to say a workstation class product – and their solution’s presence in the market has been much more subdued.
As an alternative to traditional PCs, the blade PC solutions offered by the various vendors are effectively competing with PCs, albeit they are based in datacenters. Therefore some of the more important design considerations in this category include: