The analyst firm reported that, despite slowing economic growth in the US, this is the eighth consecutive quarter of positive revenue growth and the highest first-quarter revenue in the worldwide server market since 2001.
IDC's latest Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker revealed that more than two million servers were shipped for the second consecutive quarter.
Unit shipment growth of 7.8 percent year over year in the first quarter of 2008 demonstrates that worldwide demand for servers has remained healthy in the quarter, even as virtualisation technology is being adopted worldwide.
Linux servers posted their second consecutive quarter of solid growth, with year-over-year revenue growth of 8.4 percent for a total of US$1.8 billion in the quarter, second only to the US$2 billion in Linux server revenue seen in 4Q07.
Linux-based servers now represent 13.7 percent of all server revenues, according to the IDC report.
"The server market continues to experience solid growth as businesses of all types focus on expanding and refreshing their IT infrastructures for both traditional and emerging cloud-based workloads," said Matt Eastwood, group vice president of enterprise platforms at IDC.
"Geographically, the Americas was the weakest region with an overall revenue decline driven in part by a slowing US economy.
"However, it is also clear that positive exchange rates are helping to drive server revenue growth in EMEA and Asia/Pacific. Technology suppliers will need to be careful not to become too dependent on this short-term economic boost."
IBM and HP again finished the first quarter in a "statistical tie" for the number one position in the worldwide server market.
HP logged 29 percent of sales, while IBM had 28.1 percent. HP gained 0.2 points of share and IBM lost 0.4 points of share year over year during the quarter.
HP's growth was driven by strength in its ProLiant, Integrity and BladeSystem businesses.
Revenue growth at IBM was driven by solid performance in its System z server business.
Dell grew factory revenues 9.4 percent year over year and moved into the number three position in the market with 12.3 percent share for 1Q08.
Sun Microsystems' revenues declined 1.8 percent year over year in the quarter to end on 10.5 percent.
Virtualisation fails to dent server demand
By
Robert Jaques
on May 29, 2008 3:52PM

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Ingram Micro Ushers in the Age of Ultra

Channel can help lead customers to boosting workplace wellbeing with professional headsets

Build cybersecurity capability with award winning Fortinet training from Ingram Micro

How NinjaOne Is Supporting The Channel As It Builds An Innovative Global Partner Program

Kaseya Dattocon APAC 2024 is Back
Sponsored Whitepapers
-1.jpg&w=100&c=1&s=0)
Stop Fraud Before It Starts: A Must-Read Guide for Safer Customer Communications

The Cybersecurity Playbook for Partners in Asia Pacific and Japan

Pulseway Essential Eight Framework

7 Best Practices For Implementing Human Risk Management

2025 State of Machine Identity Security Report