Stratus


Stratus Technologies has been in business providing the highest levels of application availability in the industry for the past 30 years. Stratus ftServers run standing Windows operating systems, RedHat Linux and VMware vSphere operating systems and provide instant failover protection through a hardware platform that looks and feels just like a standard Dell Server. With over over 11,500 servers throughout the world, protecting some of the most mission critical applications, Stratus Servers are a proven technology platform that can be leveraged to provide complete application redundancy.

If you can turn on a PC, and load a software application, you can create a Status-based fault-tolerant hardware platform to enable redundancy for your mission critical applications. It is really that easy and because Stratus Servers don't need any special software to work, setting up a Stratus Server is as easy as setting up a Dell Server. Load your operating system (if it is not already loaded), load your application and run. Leverage Stratus Servers for a plant historian, an MES Server, redundant terminal servers, redundant HMI applications, etc. and instantly provide a redundant hardware platform to host your critical software applications.  Learn more at www.stratus.com.






The Stratus Advantage

  • Stratus Servers are open systems running standard Windows, Linux and VMware. Any application which runs on any of these operating environments will run without change on Stratus and become instantly continuously available.
  • Stratus Servers require no specialized training to set up a system. A Stratus ftServer appears to the operating system to be just another stand alone server. Load your software and go.
  • Stratus Servers provide 99.999% application availability. Engineered to prevent failure, Stratus ftServer� systems are installed in hundreds of manufacturing facilities across the globe, virtually eliminating software downtime.
  • With Stratus Servers, there is no complex set up or fail over testing, no provisioning hardware, or mirroring disk drives. No engineering effort, no systems integration.
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