Arm Gets Closer To Creating Full-Blown Server CPU Designs
It takes too long to get a new compute engine in the field, and everybody complains about it. …
It takes too long to get a new compute engine in the field, and everybody complains about it. …
The largest clouds will always have to buy X86 processors from Intel or AMD so long as the enterprises of the world – and the governments and educational institutions who also consume a fair number of servers – have X86 applications that are not easily ported to Arm or RISC-V architectures. …
At the moment, the most powerful Arm processor on the planet is the 48-core A64FX processor from Fujitsu, which was created as the heavily vectored compute engine for the “Fugaku” supercomputer at RIKEN Lab in Japan. …
If you think designing a new CPU from scratch is hard, you ought to try raising money to do it. …
When it comes to chips, there is a big difference between a kicker and a fork. …
The years-long run-up to the first exascale supercomputers was really a story about the ongoing competition between the United States and China. …
By every measure we can get our hands on, 2022 was a bumper year for server shipments and server spending, which is good indicator for the appetite for new kinds of applications and the expansion of existing applications in the world at large. …
Supermicro has become the latest of the big OEMs to add Arm-based systems to its portfolio, with the launch of its Mt. …
Red Hat is not just the top Linux software vendor and the driving force behind IBM’s hybrid cloud ambitions. …
When computer architectures change in the datacenter, the attack always comes from the bottom. …
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