Intel is one of several companies that have put $44 million into Oxide, a startup that wants to change the face of on-premise and cloud servers with a minimalist design.

Oxide’s mission has revolved around provisioning cloud-facing servers for purchase, rather than just for rent, for businesses primarily concerned with keeping IT infrastructure on-premises. The firm is combining this approach with its co-designing of hardware and software suited to the purpose.

Companies like Google, AWS and Meta have built lightweight servers like this by stripping away parts, but they can’t be accessed for purchase – only for rent by tapping into their services. The likes of Dell and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) also haven’t yet developed barebones cloud servers yet, which is where Oxide steps in.

For more than 30 years, Intel Capital has been supporting and investing in standout startups to build world-changing technologies. Now, Intel Capital is set to become a. stand alone investment fund.

Oxide ships its rack with everything installed in one box, rather than the “rack-and-stack” approach that sees servers arrive with additional cabling and hardware. Its servers have no hard-coded quotas for switching or routing, with customers able to program the switch. The firm has also replaced the baseboard management controller with a service processor, which can handle power cycling and remote management of servers.

A bare-bones cloud computer you can buy

The company first outlined the concept of reequipping servers in 2019, and has since developed its own components and software to manage workloads and networking. Servers are ordinarily designed to combine stacks of software and hardware layers that take software further away from chipsets, according to the firm. But this minimalist approach brings the software much closer to the silicon.

“We felt like it was a real shame to have a traditional switch,” said Oxide CTO Bryan Cantrill, according to HPCWire. “x86 is a kind of a colostomy bag on the side of the switch, where you have got this kind of low-powered Xeon D, or what have you, on that an Intel Management Engine, and a bunch of things that we didn’t want in it.”

But why is Intel’s Management Engine unwanted by companies? Visit the Intel Management Engine article to learn more.

Oxide is unlocking the value of highly performant rack-scale infrastructure for the rest of the world. For those interested in taking advantage, please check out Oxide.computer to learn more or sign up.

Leave a comment

Trending