Am Mittwoch, 31. Oktober 2012 schrieb Stan Hoeppner: > > http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2411546,00.asp > > > > > > > > Although to be fair, Stan was talking about desktops, and this is > > about servers. > > If it ever gets off the ground. The super high density application > sever space within the sever market is small, specialized, and the > requirement for x86 pervasive. If this weren't true we'd already see 8 > socket 32-way 1U ARM servers on the market, and we don't. We don't see > any ARM servers. I doubt AMD will sell many of the ARM based blades. > > At some point AMD will drop the ARM idea. Then, if they smarten up, > they'll move the non-APU AthlonII x4 core to 32nm, bin sort and clock > down some chips to 1.6-2GHz to get TDP down to 20-25 watts--not as low > as Atom, but much more powerful. The rest they'll clock at 3.6-4.8GHz > (plus turbo) and sell them as faster version of the current non-APU AII > x4.
Phoronix.com has a test running where a ARM multicore machine could not beat an Ivybridge machine by power consumption / processing power ratio. You just need too many ARM cores to at least theoretically reach a similar performance than the Ivybridge. And then this too many ARM cores consume more power than the Ivybridge. And then the application itself has to scale to this many cores, which is more likely to achieve with scalable server applications however. Whether ARM will reach desktop market or not, I leave this open. Then there is China with their MIPS based Longson CPUs. I do not think that x86 architecture as only option in desktop market is set in stone for forever. But granted I find it a pity that soo much variety of CPU platforms has gone already. I still have an m68k Amiga and a PowerPC based Amiga successor here¹. And heck this embedded PowerPC CPU doesn´t even have a passive cooling. Granted it has not anything near the power of modern x86 CPUs and the board prices are expensive to put it mildly, but the board has its elegance and there are a bit more performant variants available meanwhile. That said AmigaOS 4.1 does really fast on it, except when it comes to run complex / big computing intensive applications. And computing intensive starts a bit earlier here than on modern x86 based systems. [1] http://www.acube-systems.biz/index.php?page=hardware&pid=1 Ciao, -- Martin 'Helios' Steigerwald - http://www.Lichtvoll.de GPG: 03B0 0D6C 0040 0710 4AFA B82F 991B EAAC A599 84C7 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201211021327.55607.mar...@lichtvoll.de