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Sun Joins Apple in the Intel Camp for x86 Chips

An anonymous reader writes "Don't worry, SPARC isn't being replaced by Itanic. However, Sun will start using Intel Xeon CPU's in their X86 servers. Further evidence that Intel's Core microarchitecture is winning back a lot of the business that AMD won with Opteron." More coverage at CNN Money and the International Herald Tribune.

14 of 149 comments (clear)

  1. Competition benefit / AMD warchest by cblack · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Core 2 Duo does seem to offer some benefits over the current opteron line and I think it is great that server vendors can so easily switch between them for new models. I believe Sun has a fairly sizable portion of the x86 server market and it was good to see a company have such success with AMD CPUs. Overall I think the competition is a good thing, but I do worry a bit that AMD will have trouble regaining sales even if they have the better next gen technology due to decreased profits as they lose server vendor sales. I look forward to a next gen battle based primarily on merit.

  2. Re:This is a surprise by be-fan · · Score: 4, Informative

    If this was last year, he was likely talking about the older (P4-based) Xeon, not the new (Core 2-based) Xeon.

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  3. But the interesting bit is by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 4, Interesting
    ...and for Intel to endorse Sun's Solaris operating system...
    What's that about??
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    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
  4. Re:So, ahhhh... by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, they're using Intel chips in their line of servers that previously used AMD chips. For the pro-AMD slashdotters, this is "a very bad thing"(tm).

  5. sun.com by Daemonstar · · Score: 5, Informative

    Of all the links posted in the summary, there's no link to the webcast on Sun's site about the story (01/22/07 @ 10:00 PST, Realplayer 10 required). :P

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  6. Sun is not abandoning AMD. Sun is adding Intel. by gp310ad · · Score: 4, Informative

    Which makes sense. When there are two competitive players whose product features and performance keep passing each other, why not give the customer a choice and at the same time exploit that competition to improve ones own position...

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  7. Questionable by tomstdenis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Core 2 Duo has an awesome ALU, and it is definitely low power.

    But they still suck for NUMA. Unless Sun is building desktops I don't see the point of the move until Intel starts rolling out CSI [which by that time AMD will be 65nm working on 45nm parts...].

    For the desktop, hands down the Core 2 Duo is the winner. These things are just amazing. Even when overclocked the thing is so cold that the CPU fan turns off and the BIOS warns me (annoying... so I turned the warning off). In terms of IPC it matches the AMD offerings fairly well.

    Tom

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    1. Re:Questionable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      AMD reached 65nm last quarter. Intel's already moved to 45nm, though, but AMD's trying to catch up. Still, one of Intel's big strengths is its silicon fabbing capability; some have said Intel isn't so much in the business of designing chips as building fabs.

  8. Re:Sun needs this by nwhitehorn · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sun is moving ahead with their SPARC servers, and just taped out a successor to the Niagara. If you'd read the article, you'd know they are replacing their (quite excellent) AMD servers with Intel ones, not SPARC with anything. Sun has quite happily been selling both architectures for some time now.

  9. I'm sceptical by btarval · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I agree that competition is good for the consumer, but I have to wonder what the effect will really be on their AMD servers. In the server biz, there's a LOT more to it than today's CPU-intensive benchmarks. The other big thing is IO bandwidth, and this is where AMD has been far more competitive than Intel is. AMD appears to be able to continue this lead, based on both companies claimed roadmaps, the last time I looked.

    One can only shove so much data across a single bus, and AMD seems to have realized this, while I don't see this as easily done from Intel.

    One of the cool things about AMD is the Hypertransport bus. This allows one to offload various peripherals easily onto separate busses, while still allowing them to be shared across CPU's. Offloading PCI peripherals (for example) onto different busses allows one to achieve higher IO bandwidth. In contrast, Intel's current approach seems to be to shove more and more CPU's onto the same bus.

    It's as if Intel has completely forgotten about how to keep the CPU busy - that's the main name of the game, and has been for years (to say the least). Idle CPUs are useless, and the more idle CPUs there are, the sillier it is, IMHO.

    And AMD appears to be capable of outdoing Intel in the bandwidth area, for both memory and bus bandwidth.

    So it looks to me like AMD will continue to be ahead of Intel as far as top-end server solutions go.

    In short, I find this particular move puzzling. Sun has traditionally backed the best performance design, and I see Intel still lagging here overall. This strikes me as more of a marketing move, not a real engineering one. It will be interesting to see how popular these Intel-based servers remain.

    --
    The best way to predict the future is to create it. - Peter Drucker.
    1. Re:I'm sceptical by cbreaker · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree with you. The thing is, even if RightSaidFred99 over there thinks Intel is just as good at SMP configurations, it's only NOW just starting to become a reality. AMD has been using HyperTransport since the first Opteron, released several years ago. You've been able to use 4-way Opteron boxes and achieve MUCH better overall system performance then you ever could with a Xeon. Think VMware. When a dual-CPU Xeon outperforms a Quad-CPU Xeon, there's something wrong with the bus architecture.

      The "core" CPU is finally, after over 7 years, perhaps better then the current generation of AMD CPU's, but again, it's still based on the same old North-bridge configuration. While Intel has managed to bump up the speed on this bus a bit, and they can more easily support new and faster RAM because the CPU doesn't have the memory controller, it's still the same old. If you're doing 4-way or more, with heavy applications like busy ESX servers, you're going to get a LOT more performance out of your Opteron system, including 4-way systems utilizing multi-core CPU's. Just because CPU's are going dual and multi-core, doesn't mean enterprise servers will ship with only one socket.

      I say Good for Intel, the Core CPU is a good one. But, if you look at everything Intel has been doing with their CPU line lately, you'll see that they are generally copying AMD in a lot of places, starting with EM64T (aka AMD64.)

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  10. Yeah, I think you're right by Concern · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What I'm seeing now are people who went google-style with blades buying empty rackspace to cope with hosting providers' power per rack ratio.

    Meanwhile Sun's sales guys are selling $14k 72 watt, 8-way, 32-thread T2000's that can replace multiple Opteron (or Core :) blades... IF you're within its application domain. Interesting gamble.

    Most webapps probably are... not actually a lot of hot floating point, or math code in general, in that space. But you have to be very careful.

    So, it's possible that Sun has turned their biggest disadvantage into their biggest advantage: they're in a niche! Yet they can design whole hardware architectures. So it frees them up to find ways to specialize, and it seems that there may be some payoffs there.

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  11. Re:Sun needs this by BrainInAJar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "Today you can get the same functionality with several cheap Intel boxes with either Windows or Linux."

    Or UNIX for that matter. Solaris is free to use, and a support contract is about half the price of RHEL...

  12. Sun Benefits by dupup · · Score: 4, Interesting
    FWIW, it seems to me that Sun agreed to launch a Xeon-based server line in exchange for Intel pushing Solaris x86, rather than the other way 'round. In other words, the emphasis, from Sun's point of view, is that Intel will advocate in favor of Solaris, for which Sun offers Intel some bidness.

    IAASE (I Am A Sun Employee), BTW.