By Don Clark 

Oracle Corp. Chairman Larry Ellison has been competing against rival computer makers based on performance. His new weapon is price.

The billionaire software entrepreneur unveiled new server hardware Wednesday that he said is roughly half the price of comparable machines sold by Cisco Systems Inc. and others--and is considerably faster.

Oracle said the refrigerator-sized system would allow the company for the first time to go after a much broader audience of server buyers, rather than focus on customers who need extra computing speed for jobs like sifting through large databases.

"We've never really competed for the data-center core," Mr. Ellison said at an event in Redwood Shores, Calif. "Now we have a new strategy."

The server market is one of the most intensely competitive parts of the technology industry. Many manufacturers now offer systems that are largely interchangeable, in part because they use compatible chips from Intel Corp. or Advanced Micro Devices Inc.

Mr. Ellison said the company's prior machines frequently translated into lower operating costs for customers, but customers fixated on the upfront price to buy cookie-cutter style servers that are purchased in the hundreds or thousands of dollars by some companies. To appeal to those customers, he said, Oracle for the first time opted to create a bundle that acts like a rack of such simple servers and other necessary components--and to offer the combination at a lower price.

The new system, part of the fifth generation of what Oracle calls its "engineered systems" product line, incorporates data storage and networking features along with the equivalent of 27 individual servers, each containing two Intel Xeon processor chips. It costs about $562,000, Mr. Ellison said, compared with $912,000 for a system based on components from Cisco and EMC Corp. as part of a joint venture between those companies.

Oracle's new hardware is the latest outgrowth of the software company's 2010 acquisition of Sun Microsystems Inc., a $7.4 billion deal that so far has mostly been a negative factor on Oracle's income statement. In December, however, Oracle reported that hardware revenue rose 14% to $1.3 billion in the quarter ended Nov. 30.

The company tries to differentiate itself in the server market by tailoring its hardware to work with specific combinations of Oracle software--and adapting its programs to exploit unique features of the machines.

Besides the general-purpose server line, Mr. Ellison unveiled a series of other machines that are tailored for specific applications. In each case, he stressed a combination of performance advantages over competitors as well as aggressive pricing.

"You pay half as much, but you have to be willing to go twice as fast," Mr. Ellison joked about one system.

Write to Don Clark at don.clark@wsj.com

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