i tried to enter "intelligent privsioning" by pressing "f10"-key: this brings me to a screen where i can choose between "self update" and "fallback". fallback seems to be a bootloader entry that tries to boot a linux kernel that ends up after 1.1seconds in a kernel panic as it was not able to mount root filesystem and "self update" boots a working linux kernel that tries to install a gaius.3.50-100.x86_64.rpm. i assume it therefore needs network connectivity so i connected (the first) ethernet port to a standard "home-network (dhcp), nat" but it stalls keep saying it installs that rpm file (has been running for days without changing any status).
HPE, first. please provide a better web portal that clearly describes which downloadable files (bios, intelligent provisioning, ...) should be used in order to update the system (have a look at supermicro.com how this could be achieved). and btw, please speed up your webservers....
HPE, please provide driver downloads for customers that do not want to relay on your propritary "intelligent provisioning" (that breaks) in order to still enable classic installs (just by inserting dvd/usb and running a clean install)
HPE, first, i ordered this server w/o iLO 5 enable pci express card, as it was hard to me (even if we do servers since 1995) to fire out that iLO won't work without this card, so i assumed iLO will work (but will not have a dedicated ethernet port, so shared among others). it's even possible to configure network (ip, subnet, gateway, ...) within iLO bios config but .... the configuration gets lost without a single note that you have to buy that enabler pci express card. HPE, it took me half a day to figure out that it's not that buggy as "intelligent provisioning" but you want me to pay $100 extra to persist my network config within iLO. you can have $200 if you disable iLO option within bios saying "put some more money in to get this feature activated"
HPE, never ever again a microserver. it's my 4th in the last decade and its still pain/ass. why can't you go slimmer? why "intelligent provisioning"? i'd like to run a raid setup within ncurses-like mode, no embedded web-browser that tries to hide some htpp://localhost services.
i had expected to quickly install a native version of windows server 2019, as this is the current server os from microsoft but without having a usable version of "intelligent provisioning" one has to run a classic install but cannot use smart array features as raid1, which sucks, of course.
HPE, please FIX YOUR TOOLS. provide linux tools to create usb key. provide better descriptions in your downloads, provide scripts that work: display progress, display what's goin' on, diplay success or error messages. recovering "intelligent provisioning" does not result in an error or success message: your recovery script just reboots after completing.
do all hp servers have Intelligent provisioning on them or can be installed on them or just for new generation servers like g9 or g10 ??can my dl360 G7 have intelligent provisioning or does have it and I don't find it ???
So long story short, I've got two HPE Proliant DL380 Gen10 servers where I'm trying to configure 3 Samsung SAS SSDs each and 1 HPE SATA disk. In one of the servers, everything works fine. I've configured arrays as I want to. On the other, I can't even get the disks to be recognised on SSA (Smart Storage Administrator). I've compared the disks and the System ROM firmware, iLO firmware and the Intelligent provisioning firmware and they're all the same, but none of this have helped. Any ideas are welcome.
Welcome to the ClearOS Marketplace, where you can quickly find and install the apps your system needs. With ClearCenter and the ClearOS Marketplace, your server is transformed into a smart server that you can depend on for years to come. The ClearOS Marketplace delivers powerful apps and services at the click of a button. Continue to check back to see what is new and intelligently integrated into your new server.
The fix is surprisingly straightforward however. Rather than request an array configuration as part of the intelligent provisioning process, instead launch the ACU separately. Configure the disks as you wish in advance, and then return to Intelligent Provisioning afterwards. This step seems to bypass whatever disk-hiding glitch was present in the system and setup then resumes as advertised.
The latest developments and recent progress on the key technologies enabling next-generation 6G mobile networks
Toward 6G: A New Era of Convergence offers an up-to-date guide to the emerging 6G vision by describing new human-centric services made possible by combinations of mobile robots, avatars, and smartphones, which will be increasingly replaced with wearable displays and haptic interfaces that provide immersive extended reality (XR) experiences. The authors--noted experts on the topic--include a review of their work and information on the recent progress on the Tactile Internet and multi-sensory haptic communications. The book highlights decentralized edge computing in particular via Ethereum blockchain technologies, most notably the so-called decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) for crowdsourcing of human skills to solve problems that machines (such as autonomous artificial intelligence agents and robots) alone cannot solve well.
The book also contains a review of the most recent and ongoing work on XR (including virtual/augmented/mixed reality). Specifically, the book describes the implications of the transition from the current gadgets-based Internet to a future Internet that is evolving from bearables (such as smartphones), moves towards wearables (for example Amazon's recently launched voice-controlled Echo Loop ring, glasses, and earbuds), and then finally progresses to nearables with embedded computing technologies and intelligent provisioning mechanisms for the delivery of human-intended services, including sixth-sense perceptions, in a 6G post-smartphone era. This important text:
* Offers a review of the 6G network architectures and key enabling technologies
* Explains why 6G should not be a mere exploration of more spectrum at high-frequency bands, but rather a convergence of upcoming technological trends
* Describes the Tactile Internet's human-in-the-loop centric design principles and haptic communications models
* Includes analytical frameworks to estimate the fluid orchestration of human + machine co-activities across unified communication network infrastructures
* Explores the performance gains of cooperative computation offloading with communications and computation limitations in both fronthaul and backhaul
Written for students, network researchers, professionals, engineers, and practitioners, Toward 6G: A New Era of Convergence explores the most recent advances on the key technologies enabling next-generation 6G mobile networks, with an emphasis on their seamless convergence.
In order to add to the supported Operating Systems (OSes) for any server provisioning within Cloud Portal, you may first have to modify the standards tables for OS Types and OS Systems to add needed OS types and OSes to the list.
Creates a rescore execution plan. A rescore execution plan is an Amazon Kendra Intelligent Ranking resource used for provisioning the Rescore API. You set the number of capacity units that you require for Amazon Kendra Intelligent Ranking to rescore or re-rank a search service's results.
Adds a specified tag to a specified rescore execution plan. A rescore execution plan is an Amazon Kendra Intelligent Ranking resource used for provisioning the Rescore API. If the tag already exists, the existing value is replaced with the new value.
Updates a rescore execution plan. A rescore execution plan is an Amazon Kendra Intelligent Ranking resource used for provisioning the Rescore API. You can update the number of capacity units you require for Amazon Kendra Intelligent Ranking to rescore or re-rank a search service's results.
df19127ead