Trisha Shetty (Editor)

RLX Technologies

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Fate
  
acquired by HP in 2005

Area served
  
United States

Founded
  
1999

Founders
  
Christopher Hipp,

Founder
  
Christopher Hipp

RLX Technologies httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen55bRLX

Industry
  
Computer hardware, Computer software, Computer systems

Headquarters
  
The Woodlands, Unincorporated Montgomery County, Texas, United States

Key people
  
Christopher Hipp, Founder, former President and CEO Doug Erwin, Last Chief Executive Officer

RLX Technologies (bought by HP in 2005) was a company based in The Woodlands, TX and was the first company in the world to create and market what is now known as a blade server. Founded in 1999 by Christopher Hipp, one of the inventors of the blade server, and numerous former Compaq Computers employees, the company pioneered the use of blade servers, a compact, stripped-down computer server that includes all of the necessary components to operate as a computer while taking up minimal space on a standard rack mount and minimizing power consumption.

Contents

History

RLX was first founded in 1999 as RocketLogix, Inc. thanks to Hipp's connection to a Dallas-based investment firm, Cracken Harkey, Co. After convincing the firm that there was a need for a new efficient web server concept, they agreed to build an investment profile for RocketLogix.
After extensive development of their blade architecture, with Hipp at the helm, the company changed its name in 2001 to RLX Technologies. This change coincided with the company's move to the Woodlands, TX.
In 2004 RLX decided to shift their focus away from hardware development and focus their efforts solely on their blade server management system, Control Tower. This shift was necessitated by a decline in the server market, largely due to the dotcom gloom.

Patent

The original designers of the blade server concept, Christopher Hipp and David Kirkeby, applied for a patent on their design on July 20, 2000, and the United States Patent and Trademark Office awarded patent number (US 6411506 ) for a "High density web server chassis system and method" on June 25, 2002, the first commercialized blade server architecture.

Acquisition by HP

After 5 years of operation, RLX was bought by Hewlett-Packard in October 2005 so that HP could bolster their blade server hardware and software offerings.

References

RLX Technologies Wikipedia