Actually no... the blade which supports the GRID M6 module is an OEM product produced by Amulet Hotkey. It's essentially an OEM modified version of the Dell PowerEdge M630. If you prefer then you can still buy it from Dell and install it alongside standard server blades.
Ryan, one of the things missing from your section about these being Tesla vs GRID cards is the licensing. Nvidia is basically making the GRID functionality a Licensed Upgrade to the base Tesla offering. Thats how you get from A to B now.
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pblades - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link
Amulet Hotkey is the first OEM partner to launch a blade offering with the M6 card - you can see it on our booth at #VMworld #2434Casper42 - Monday, September 14, 2015 - link
Don't you mean Dell?jmbnbn - Monday, September 21, 2015 - link
Actually no... the blade which supports the GRID M6 module is an OEM product produced by Amulet Hotkey. It's essentially an OEM modified version of the Dell PowerEdge M630. If you prefer then you can still buy it from Dell and install it alongside standard server blades.tygrus - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link
Concurrent Users for K1 = 32, K2=16 (if using minimum 512MB per user, less users if more MB is required per user). http://www.nvidia.com/object/virtual-gpus.htmlpblades - Thursday, September 3, 2015 - link
VMworld was a great launch event for GRID 2.0 - you can see our launch video here https://youtu.be/egU4_SEc9EcCasper42 - Monday, September 14, 2015 - link
Ryan, one of the things missing from your section about these being Tesla vs GRID cards is the licensing.Nvidia is basically making the GRID functionality a Licensed Upgrade to the base Tesla offering.
Thats how you get from A to B now.