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HP's NonStop Servers Go x86, Countdown To Itanium Extinction Begins

An anonymous reader writes "HP has been the sole holdout on the Itanium, mostly because so much of the PA-RISC architecture lives on in that chip. However, the company recently began migration of Integrity Superdome servers from Itanium to Xeon, and now it has announced that the top of its server line, the NonStop series, will migrate to x86 as well, presumably the 15-core E7 V2 Intel will release next year. So while no one has said it, this likely seems the end of the Itanium experiment, one that went on a lot longer than it should have, given its failure out of the gate."

5 of 243 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I suspect it is bcos of HP's TCPA connection by kthreadd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    IBM supports Linux on their Power based systems, and I don't think they have any plans to stop that.

  2. Re:given its failure out of the gate. by Big+Hairy+Ian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Faliure??? I know of firms and organisations that still haven't retired their old IBM3000 mainframes!! Itanium will be around for a while to come.

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  3. Re:Oh the MEMEs by Lluc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If they had succeeded Intel would have owned the 64 bit CPU realm on the desktop with a proprietary architecture effectively eliminating any competition in the space.

    Realistically, Intel would have licensed the IA64 architecture to AMD or some other third party. Intel would not want to have an absolute CPU monopoly and risk government intervention. It is much better for Intel to have a barely competitive company (currently AMD) operating in the same space but not offering any kind of threat to their market position.

  4. Re:Itanium was a legend by green+is+the+enemy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't look at Itanium in a completely bad light. It was a good microprocessor architecture experiment, and had the right motivations (break free of the x86 legacy cruft, design a truly scalable architecture). A lot of useful technology was developed along the way. This technology will be incorporated into future chips. Intel is rare among large technology companies to actually take huge long-term risks, and even survive failure. We need more high-risk projects like this to develop truly breakthrough technology.

  5. Re:EPIC failure by Archfeld · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ditto that comment. I really hate the fact that HP gets any credit for NON-STOP, Tandems baby, or VAX and Alpha, 2 of the 3 great things that Digital brought forth into this world, the other WAS Alta-Vista. The only thing HP ever did well was printers and that time has LONG since passed...

    Note : I spent several years supporting all of the above machines and may be a bit biased.

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