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Apple, Xserves, and OS X Server

Apple will not be developing a future version of Xserve. Xserve will be available for order through January 31, 2011. Apple will honor and support all Xserve system warranties and extended support programs. Apple intends to offer the current shipping 160GB, 1TB, and 2TB Apple Drive Modules for Xserve through the end of 2011 or while supplies last. Apple will continue to support Xserve customers with service parts for warranty and out-of-warranty service.

As of January 31, 2011 Apple will no longer have enterprise-class hardware for sale. This has sparked a massive discussion, because there are a number of pretty vocal people using Xserves to run Mac OS X Server, supporting Mac OS X clients, or as clusters running Xgrid. The two big questions now are:

To me, the larger move would be announcing virtualization for Mac OS X Server. Imagine Mac OS X Server running in a virtual machine under VMware vSphere or in a VMware-based cloud like Terremark’s! That would be wonderful. Imagine taking it one step further, too, and being able to supply Mac OS X virtual desktops! Desktop virtualization is dominated right now by Microsoft Windows, mainly because the only other viable desktop OS vendor, Apple, couldn’t care less. If they started caring imagine what they could do in the enterprise desktop space.

However, I doubt there’s any larger plan. My bet is that Apple is abandoning their customers, for a couple of reasons:

So what to do now? If you’re looking at a new Xserve investment in the next year I’d either do it quickly, or decide to do something completely different on a real enterprise-class server platform (Linux or Windows). If you do buy new Xserves you are buying yourself three years to figure out your next move, which might be attractive, but it’s also a big technical debt you’ll have to repay if Apple doesn’t actually announce a new path later.

And I don’t think they will.

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