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Understanding Hardware End of Service Life
Be prepared for every lifecycle phase of your data center hardware.
Understanding a piece of hardware equipment’s End of Service Life can be confusing as it varies per OEM. Park Place Technologies has narrowed it down to four key phases that you should know about as you plan out your data center hardware maintenance and support.
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1
General availability or sale dateGeneral Availability (GA) is when the piece of hardware is brought to market and available for purchase. Hardware and software support is available.
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2
End of Life or End of Sale (EOL)When hardware equipment reaches its End of Life (EOL) or End of Sale (EOS), it means that the OEM is no longer producing or selling the particular piece of equipment. When an OEM announces the EOL or EOS, this generally starts a 5 year phase-out of the equipment. Hardware and software support can still be available at this time.
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3
End of Development (EOD)End of Development (EOD) for hardware comes when the OEM ceases development and production of that device’s operating system. Software updates and firmware patches are no longer rolled out. Around this time, contract and support renewals may no longer be available.
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4
End of Support Life (EOSL)The End of Support Life, or End of Service Life (EOSL) is the final phase in the data center equipment’s lifecycle. At this point, the OEM no longer sells, provides operating system updates for, or renews support agreements on the hardware.