Building a Better Server? Oxide Computer Ships Its First Rack
Oxide Computer Company spent four years working toward “The power of the cloud in your data center… bringing hyperscaler agility to the mainstream enterprise.” And on June 30, Oxide finally shipped its very first server rack.
Long-time Slashdot reader destinyland shares this report:
It’s the culmination of years of work — to fulfill a long-standing dream. In December of 2019, Oxide co-founder Jess Frazelle had written a blog post remembering conversations over the year with people who’d been running their own workloads on-premises… “Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call ‘infrastructure privilege’ since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else!”
Frazelle had seen a chance to make an impact with “better integration between the hardware and software stacks, better power distribution, and better density. It’s even better for the environment due to the energy consumption wins.”
Oxide CTO Bryan Cantrill sees real problems in the proprietary firmware that sits between hardware and system software — so Oxide’s server eliminates the BIOS and UEFI altogether, and replaces the hardware-managing baseboard management controller (or BMC) with “a proper service processor.” They even wrote their own custom, all-Rust operating system (named Hubris). On the Software Engineering Daily podcast, Cantrill says “These things boot like a rocket.”
And it’s all open source. “Everything we do is out there for people to see and understand…” Cantrill added. On the Changelog podcast Cantrill assessed its significance. “I don’t necessarily view it as a revolution in its own right, so much as it is bringing the open source revolution to firmware.”
Oxide’s early funders include 92-year-old Pierre Lamond (who hired Andy Grove at Fairchild Semiconductor) — and customers who supported their vision. On Software Engineering Daily’s podcast Cantrill points out that “If you’re going to use a lot of compute, you actually don’t want to rent it — you want to own it.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Oxide Computer Company spent four years working toward “The power of the cloud in your data center… bringing hyperscaler agility to the mainstream enterprise.” And on June 30, Oxide finally shipped its very first server rack.
Long-time Slashdot reader destinyland shares this report:
It’s the culmination of years of work — to fulfill a long-standing dream. In December of 2019, Oxide co-founder Jess Frazelle had written a blog post remembering conversations over the year with people who’d been running their own workloads on-premises… “Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call ‘infrastructure privilege’ since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else!”
Frazelle had seen a chance to make an impact with “better integration between the hardware and software stacks, better power distribution, and better density. It’s even better for the environment due to the energy consumption wins.”
Oxide CTO Bryan Cantrill sees real problems in the proprietary firmware that sits between hardware and system software — so Oxide’s server eliminates the BIOS and UEFI altogether, and replaces the hardware-managing baseboard management controller (or BMC) with “a proper service processor.” They even wrote their own custom, all-Rust operating system (named Hubris). On the Software Engineering Daily podcast, Cantrill says “These things boot like a rocket.”
And it’s all open source. “Everything we do is out there for people to see and understand…” Cantrill added. On the Changelog podcast Cantrill assessed its significance. “I don’t necessarily view it as a revolution in its own right, so much as it is bringing the open source revolution to firmware.”
Oxide’s early funders include 92-year-old Pierre Lamond (who hired Andy Grove at Fairchild Semiconductor) — and customers who supported their vision. On Software Engineering Daily’s podcast Cantrill points out that “If you’re going to use a lot of compute, you actually don’t want to rent it — you want to own it.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.