With this, it'll take competition from the likes of Oracle, Cisco, HP and Dell head-on in providing converged systems.
It says it invested $2 billion in research and development, acquisitions spread over three years, and put in millions of development hours across 37 laboratories in 17 countries.
PureSystems, the new family of stacks, aims at reducing complexity at the data centre.
With FlexiPure and FlexiApplications, the two systems that have been launched, IBM is bundling servers, storage, network, software and applications in one box that would not only be ready for deployment within hours, but have built-in expertise garnered over the years and also be cloud-ready.
The aim is to simplify the technology environment for companies and make them invest both time and money in innovation.
According to the 2012 IBM Data Centre study, one in every five organisations can allocate more than half their IT budgets for innovation.
"Almost two-thirds of IT budgets are today spent on doing nothing, but keeping the light on. More important, the procurement cycle that CIOs and companies need to manage is anywhere between six and nine months.
This, in turn, delays project," said Alok Ohire, director, Systems and Technology Group, IBM India/South Asia.
A survey by Forrester on behalf of IBM suggests 23 per cent of new IT projects (worldwide) are deployed late.
IBM said the launch was one of the biggest from the company, as it could change the way IT was being procured and deployed.
According to Barbara Cain, vice-president at IBM's software group, since the system has codified best practices, new application deployment is faster by as much as 20-30
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