🚀 Elevate your enterprise edge with the ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Plus v2!
The Hewlett Packard Enterprise ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Plus v2 is a compact yet powerful tower server featuring a 4-core Intel Xeon E-2314 processor, 32GB DDR4 ECC memory at 3200 MT/s, PCIe Gen4 expansion slots, and Intel VROC SATA software RAID for advanced storage management. Designed for professional environments, it ships fully configured under the HPE Smart Choice program, ensuring rapid deployment and scalable performance for modern business workloads.
Screen Resolution | 1920 x 1080 |
Max Screen Resolution | 1920x1080 |
Processor | 3.8 GHz intel_xeon |
RAM | 32 GB DDR4 |
Memory Speed | 3.9 GHz |
Hard Drive | Hybrid Drive |
Graphics Coprocessor | Intel UHD Graphics 630 |
Chipset Brand | Intel |
Card Description | Dedicated |
Brand | Hewlett Packard Enterprise |
Item model number | Gen 10+ |
Hardware Platform | PC |
Operating System | All Windows Server Versions 2000 |
Item Weight | 13.33 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 18 x 14.4 x 8.9 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 18 x 14.4 x 8.9 inches |
Color | Black |
Processor Brand | Intel |
Number of Processors | 1 |
Computer Memory Type | DDR4 SDRAM |
Hard Drive Interface | Serial ATA-600 |
D**H
Just a great micro server
Just a great micro server.One thing to note, this server (offer) in particular didn't come with an iLO interface.
A**W
I'll keep you posted.
the power adapter smells like burnt electronics, and the server came with 16gb or ram, however the specs say 32gb.let's see how this goes
A**.
No NVME support even with riser cards. Useless techsupport. Stay away from this piece of hardware!
The media could not be loaded. Interesting design. Compact size. Affordable price. Easy assembly and disassembly. External power supply. That's where the advantages end.Then we have one huge drawback: this model does not have an NVME connector, and NVME drives are not supported at all (by the BIOS itself). Even if you install an adapter board, passive or active (it doesn't matter, a no-name for $20 or for $500 from QNAP), NVME drives will give a blue screen of death.I tried to work with HP tech support on this matter: collected all the logs for them (Winwos, BIOS, IMPI-ILO, etc.), all the photos of errors, and opened the case. They promised to investigate and sort it out. But only after a few days they treated the case formally and told me to read the instructions, which said nothing about NVME. That is, they simply dumped me without considering the request on the merits.Thus, I strongly do not recommend this equipment. A server without NVME is back to the 2000s, not a 2023 model.Shame on HP for not being able to make the simplest and most essential thing today.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 month ago