Login:
Votes - 0, Average rating: 0 ( )

User manual HP, model HP ProLiant DL60 Server

Manafacture: HP
File size: 309.4 kb
File name:
Language of manual:en
Free link for this manual available at the bottom of the page



Other manuals for this model:

manual abstract





Technology Update Volume 8, Number 1

Additional resources
For additional information on the topics discussed in this article, visit:
Resource
URL
HP Integrated Lights-Out
www.hp.com/go/ilo
“Integrating HP ProLiant Lights-Out
http://h20000.www2.hp.com/bc/docs/support/Support
processors with Microsoft® Active Directory” Manual/c00190541/c00190541.pdf
Integration Note
Microsoft TechNet online publication,
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc780307.aspx
“Understanding Domains and Forests”, from
Windows Server 2003 Product Help


Meet the Expert— David Koenen
David Koenen is a Master Engineer in HP Industry Standard Servers (ISS). His
responsibilities include specifying I/O Virtualization features for NICs, Converge
Network Adapters for FCoE, network performance consulting, and editor of the
Energy Efficient Ethernet for Backplane PHYs on the IEEE 802.3az Task Force.
Wayne Opland, David’s manager, says “David is our networking scout. He is an
engineer who understands current technology, what’s coming, and how our
customers use networking. He has been recognized by his peers in the industry by
making him the editor for the Energy Efficient Ethernet standard.” Wayne marvels
at David’s “ability to grasp complexity.”

David has been married for 16 years to Lynda, and they have three children:

Tamara (11), Geoffrey (9), and Andrew (7). He enjoys jogging, coaching youth
Name: David Koenen
sports, camping, boating, water skiing, snow skiing, snow-boarding,
Title: Master Engineer, ISS Server NIC
woodworking, and scrapbooks.
Technologist
Years at HP: 17
Below are excerpts from an interview with David (and Wayne).
University/Degree:

University of Minnesota,
Why did you decide to become an engineer?
Minneapolis, MN: Bachelor of
David: I was greatly inspired by my father who was a machinist, draftsman, an
Aerospace Engineering and
Mechanics, 1984
airline electrician (avionics), and an amateur carpenter. I watched and learned as

University of Houston, Houston, TX:
he fixed things around the house, but most of all, he taught me about the
Masters of Electrical Engineering,
development process—design on paper, make a list of materials, and build to the
1998
plan. He also showed me around the cockpits of commercial airliners and told me
U.S. Patents: 9
that the engineers who designed and built them “make the big bucks.” I was also
inspired by a tour of Kennedy Space Center in Florida during one of our
vacations, so in my senior year in high school (1978) I took a really cool course in
Digital Electronics. When I went to college, I chose the Aerospace Engineering
program, but the odds of becoming an astronaut (50,000 applicants to 12
positions) were not in my favor. So, I took mostly electrical engineering electives.
After graduating, I worked on military avionics for a while before coming to
Compaq in 1991. Later, with Compaq’s tuition reimbursement, I decided to go
back and get an advanced degree in Electrical Engineering.
4


...

Other models in this manual:
Desktops - HP ProLiant DL80 Server (309.4 kb)
Desktops - HP ProLiant DL280 Server (309.4 kb)
Desktops - HP ProLiant DL590/64 Server (309.4 kb)
Desktops - HP ProLiant DL740 Server (309.4 kb)

Reviews



Your review
Your name:
Please, enter two numbers from picture:
capcha





Category