nurturedhate
Golden Member
- Aug 27, 2011
- 1,767
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The three of you did exactly what you wanted to do though, completely drag another thread into the mud around here.
Could you chill a little?The three of you did exactly what you wanted to do though, completely drag another thread into the mud around here.
Way to invent."OP" = Original Poster
"The OP" = The Original Post
Way to invent.
I read your links and I didn't see the electrical properties you claimed. Your proof was supposed to be POWER CPUs?
Popular? Its on a fast track out.
So, even though I've made it perfectlyI dont know if your're disagreeing out of reflex, but if you read the 8 or so words I wrote, I'm agreeing with your interpretation of the post people are mad about...
Made myself clear enough.I'm not inventing anything. This is common knowledge in forums...
No idea what youre carrying on about.Jesus tap dancing christ. You'd disagree that water is wet if someone on this forum said it
"OP" = Original Poster
"The OP" = The Original Post
Again as usual lies and more lies. IBM Power is growing sales. In fact revenue growth is positive for IBM non x86 servers even accounting for declining non x86 segment market share (-5.9% decline for non x86 but 8.9% growth for IBM in that non x86 segment)
https://www.hpcwire.com/2016/03/11/...ds-growth-ibm-power-strengthens-arm-stumbles/
"Of note in the battle by non-x86 processors gain market share, IDC reports that IBM experienced strong growth for POWER Systems and double-digit growth for its z System mainframes in the quarter, while ARM server sales fell in 4Q15 compared to the same time in 2014, with HPE Moonshot system deployments representing the largest single component."
"“Demand for x86 servers improved in 4Q15 with revenues increasing 8.0% year over year in the quarter to $12.5 billion worldwide as unit shipments increased 4.0% to 2.6 million servers. HPE led the market with 29.0% revenue share based on flat revenue growth over 4Q13. Dell retained second place, securing a 20.5% revenue share following 5.3% year-over-year revenue growth."
“Non-x86 servers experienced a revenue decline of -5.4% year over year to $2.9 billion, representing 18.6% of quarterly server revenue. IBM leads the segment with 75.8% revenue share on the back of a year-over-year revenue increase of 8.9% when compared with the fourth quarter of 2014.”
Demand for x86 servers improved in 4Q15 with revenues increasing 8.0%
Non-x86 servers experienced a revenue decline of -5.4%