American technology company
Newisys was an American technology company. At various times it sold computers for data centers (known as servers), and computer data storage products.
It operated as a subsidiary of Sanmina Corporation since 2004.
History
Newisys was founded in July 2000 by Claymon A. Cipione and Phillip Doyce Hester , both from IBM . It was originally based in Austin, Texas .
By the end of 2000, almost $28 million in venture capital funding was obtained from New Enterprise Associates , Austin Ventures , and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).[ 1]
By 2002, they gave demonstrations of server using 64-bit AMD processors.[ 2]
Another round of about $23 million funding was announced in November 2002,[ 3] increased to $25 million in February 2003.[ 4]
In July 2003, Sanmina-SCI (which had been a manufacturing partner) announced it would acquire Newisys for an undisclosed amount.[ 5]
Newisys became an original design manufacturer for Sanminia.
In 2005, Hester left to become the chief technical officer of AMD until 2008,[ 6] and Cipione also left to join AMD to become chief information officer .[ 7] [ 8]
In August 2005, a network-attached storage server product called the NA-1400 was announced, although shipments were reported to be delayed. It used an XScale 80219 processor from Intel .[ 9]
In November 2005, Newisys announced an integrated circuit call the AMD Horus , which allowed servers to be built with large numbers of AMD Opteron processors.[ 10] [ 11]
In January 2006, the company acquired the block storage division of Adaptec , located in Colorado Springs, Colorado .[ 12]
In May 2007, the server portion of the company was shut down, leaving storage (developed in Colorado) as the main focus.[ 13] [ 14]
Newisys returned to the server market in 2013 by adding Intel based servers into their storage products.
References
^ Matt Hudgins (November 18, 2001). "Stealth company coming into open: Newly funded with $27.9M, Newisys Inc. takes 30,000 s.f." Austin Business Journal . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Deni Connor (August 19, 2002). "Start-up to ease move to 64-bit" . Network World . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ "Form D: Notice of Sale of Securities" (PDF) . US SEC. November 23, 2002. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ "Form D: Notice of Sale of Securities" (PDF) . US SEC. February 13, 2003. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Tony Smith (July 17, 2003). "Sanmina buys Newisys: Rescue bid touted as strategic acquisition?" . The Register . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Cade Metz (April 11, 2008). "AMD evaporates CTO post: Hester out. No one in" . The Register . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Jan Buchholz (July 25, 2014). "See sprawling Lake Travis mansion set for August auction; no minimum bid" . Austin Business Journal . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Scott M. Fulton, III (March 11, 2008). "AMD appoints a former Dell exec as CIO" . Beta News . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ "Newisys NA-1400" . November 5, 2005. Archived from the original on January 14, 2006. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Klaus Fehrle (November 14, 2005). "Newisys to show off Opteron Horus today: SMP that's the one for me" . The Inquirer . Archived from the original on November 12, 2016. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Rajesh Kota. "HORUS: Large Scale SMP using AMD Opteron processors" (PDF) . HyperTransport Consortium. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 13, 2006. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ "Adaptec Announces Sale of Its Block-Based Systems Assets and Colorado-Based Technology Center to Newisys, a Sanmina-SCI Company" . Press release . Adaptec. January 31, 2006. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Charlie Demerjian (May 9, 2007). "Newisys cuts staff: More than half yesterday" . The Inquirer . Archived from the original on November 11, 2016. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ Ashlee Vance (June 20, 2007). "AOpteron darling Newisys lives!: Just a flesh wound" . The Register . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .