IBM now offers Tailored Fit Pricing options for hardware and software with an eye toward hybrid-cloud enterprises. Credit: IBM IBM continues to tweak its venerable mainframe to keep the Big Iron among the talking points in hybrid cloud. About a year ago the company changed its 20-year mainframe software pricing scheme to make it more palatable to hybrid cloud and multicloud users who might be thinking of moving workloads off the mainframe and into the cloud. Already IBM’s Tailored Fit Pricing for the IBM Z mainframe offers two consumption-based pricing models that can help customers cope with ever-changing workload—and hence software—costs. More on the IBM mainframe: Still not dead: The mainframe hangs on, sustained by Linux and hybrid cloud Now it has brought that same as-needed pricing scheme to the hardware side of the Z under the name Tailored Fit Pricing for IBM Z – Hardware Consumption Solution. It offers what IBM calls a “more standardized and transparent cloud-like hardware pricing model with combined base capacity and consumption-priced capacity.” “To meet the demands of modern workloads IBM Z hardware can now include, on top of the customers’ base capacity, a subscription-based corridor of pay-for-use capacity,” Tina Tarquinio, Director of IBM Z Platform Product Management wrote in a blog outlining the new pricing. The corridor allows for better efficiency, reduced overhead, and shorter response times in times of need. The idea is that this always-on corridor-priced capacity will help alleviate the impact of short unpredictable spikes in workload that are becoming more common in today’s digital world, Tarquinio stated. “The usage charges have a granularity of one hour and are based on actual million-service-units—or the measurement of mainframe CPU usage per-hour—consumed as measured by the Sub Capacity reporting Tool (SCRT), not full engine capacity,” IBM stated. The SCRT analyzes the IBM Z’s utilization data. The new offering is available for customers with IBM z15, z/OS general-purpose central processors and customers already using Tailored Fit Pricing for IBM Z software. IBM Z ecosystem partners also announced support for IBM Z Tailored Fit Pricing for Hardware Consumption Solution, including BMC, Broadcom, and Precisely. On the mainframe-software side, Tailored Fit Pricing removes the need for complex and restrictive capping, which typically weakens responsiveness and can impact service-level availability, IBM said. Systems can now be configured to support optimal response times and service level agreements, rather than artificially slowing down workloads to manage software licensing costs, IBM stated. Combining the hardware and software consumption options gives customers flexibility in how they use the Big Iron. “Greatly improved pricing predictability and transparency as customers manage their existing workloads and introduce new ones on to the Z platform whilst they consider including IBM Z in future architectures such as hybrid cloud, Tarquinio stated. “The model enables customers to leverage all machine resources at their disposal as and when they need it without the limiting peak-price factor.” Related content analysis HPE Aruba boosts Wi-Fi 7 AP capacity, eases IoT network management New 700 series Wi-Fi 7 access points from HPE Aruba offer faster performance, improved IoT and location capabilities, and twice as much SDRAM and flash memory for local data processing. By Michael Cooney Apr 23, 2024 4 mins Wi-Fi Network Security Networking brandpost Sponsored by Zscaler Legacy firewalls and VPNs still not up to par when stopping attacks Zero trust leaves the weaknesses of perimeter-based, network-centric, firewall-and-VPN architectures in the past. By Zscaler Apr 23, 2024 6 mins Network Security news Networking among tech roles forecast for growth in 2024 In the U.S., tech occupation employment is projected to increase by 203,125 jobs, or 3.5%, in 2024, according to CompTIA. By Denise Dubie Apr 23, 2024 3 mins Certifications IT Jobs IT Skills news European trade body lashes out at Broadcom’s VMware licensing changes CISPE said the economic viability of many cloud services utilized by customers in Europe is threatened by “the massive and unjustifiable hikes in prices, the re-bundling of products, the altered basis of billing.” By Prasanth Aby Thomas Apr 23, 2024 5 mins Technology Industry Cloud Computing PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe