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Fujitsu Road Tests the Datacenter Highway with No Speed Limits

Fujitsu Australia Limited

Sydney, November 05, 2013

News facts:
-Technology demonstration showcases light speed datacenter of the future
-Photonics removes server and storage performance bottlenecks, allows fastest-ever data processing
-Next generation system design enables business-centric datacenter

At Fujitsu Forum, Fujitsu is demonstrating technology that is destined to significantly reshape the datacenter of the future both in functionality and design. By removing current speed limits to deliver data at the speed of light, performance bottlenecks are eliminated, enabling full speed ahead for real-time business.

Fujitsu has teamed up with Intel to develop high-speed Silicon Photonics Technology, which is shown at Fujitsu Forum in Munich (November 6 and 7, 2013) for the first time outside the labs, as a working proof of concept.

With datacenter traffic expected to quadruple in the next three years, current networking technology is starting to create limitations and bottlenecks in high-speed data transfer between the three principal datacenter computing components: server, storage and network.

A new approach from Fujitsu and Intel uses data transfer at light-speed to remove the speed limits on the data highway and provide a glimpse into the future of the datacenter. The throughput performance increase from adopting silicon photonics allows data transfers at ultra-high speeds. Fiber-optic cables carrying eight strands can transfer data at of up to 1.6 Tbps (Terabits per second, and enough to fill an entire 1TB hard drive in just five seconds). Data can also be transferred over much greater longer distances (up to 300 meters) than possible with copper-based Ethernet cable interconnects. In turn, this allows application-optimized server design and a paves the way for a new datacenter design thanks to the decoupling of computing and storage resources.

The opportunity to abstract server and storage provides opportunities for cost savings on ICT facilities as heat-generating components like server processors, which require expensive climate control, need no longer be in the same room as passive storage arrays. Transferring data via fiber optic cables as photons instead of electrical pulses also reduces power consumption, and means a drastic reduction in the amount of rack cabling required – since multiple discreet Ethernet connections for every server node are no longer necessary.

By removing the speed limits caused by network performance limitations, silicon photonics paves the way for application-optimized server design. It represents the true disaggregation of compute, network and storage resources. In future it will be easier to upgrade individual components when required, instead of having to replace everything to accommodate a processor or networking refresh.

In the datacenter of the future, Fujitsu’s vision is that new systems can be more easily added without having to rearrange and re-cable entire structures. In addition, organizations can expect to reduce capital expenditure and do more with less, since removing performance limitations means that expensive components such as server processors can be better utilized.

Supporting quote
Dr. Joseph Reger, Chief Technology Officer, International Business, Fujitsu
"Photonics technology represents a breakthrough by removing the bottlenecks that datacenters are starting to have on the speed of doing business in real-time. Data throughput speeds are starting to impede on the performance even of state-of-the-art datacenters today. By rethinking the role of the datacenter – and considering it as a service-oriented provider of computing power for business needs – Fujitsu and Intel have been able to totally rethink the fundamental design. There is absolutely no reason why server and storage should stay together when there are major efficiencies to be gained by separating them."

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About Fujitsu

Fujitsu is the leading Japanese information and communication technology (ICT) company offering a full range of technology products, solutions and services. Approximately 170,000 Fujitsu people support customers in more than 100 countries. We use our experience and the power of ICT to shape the future of society with our customers. Fujitsu Limited (TSE: 6702) reported consolidated revenues of 4.4 trillion yen (US$47 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2013.
For more information, please see: : fujitsu.com

About Fujitsu Australia and New Zealand

Fujitsu Australia and New Zealand is a leading service provider of business, information technology and communications solutions. As the third largest ICT Company in the Australian and New Zealand marketplace, we partner with our customers to consult, design, build, operate and support business solutions. From strategic consulting to application and infrastructure solutions and services, Fujitsu Australia and New Zealand have earned a reputation as the single supplier of choice for leading corporate and government organisations. Fujitsu Australia Limited and Fujitsu New Zealand Limited are wholly owned subsidiaries of Fujitsu Limited (TSE: 6702).
For more information, please see: : fujitsu.com.au

Collin Duff-Tytler

Phone: Phone: +61 2 9113 9346
Mobile: Mobile: +61 409 953 349
E-mail: E-mail: collin.duff-tytler@au.fujitsu.com
Company:Fujitsu Australia and New Zealand
Marketing Programs and Communications Manager


All other company or product names mentioned herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. Information provided in this press release is accurate at time of publication and is subject to change without advance notice.

Date: 05 November, 2013
City: Sydney
Company: Fujitsu Australia Limited, Fujitsu Australia Limited