Fjodor2001
Diamond Member
- Feb 6, 2010
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*For multi-threaded workloads Core M WILL be thermally limited and not able to reach maximum target frequency
No its not. The X-Gene showed exactly what was wrong. It was severely lacking hardware performance and performance/watt.
PayPal will use X-Gene for its own servers
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/04/29/aookied_micro_q4_2015_results/
Gopi's optimism needs to be tempered a little by the company's results: consolidated net revenue for the quarter was US$37.0 million, producing a GAAP net loss of $15.1 million. For the year, the company can point to $156m of revenue and a $55m loss.
Not nice numbers, to be sure, but Gopi sees lots of upside now that he can point to PayPal and others buying X-Gene. Indeed, the company said it's now shoved 10,000 of the CPUs out the door.
You can also find previous users of ARM servers. It just didnt change anything because any useful metrics are in those ultra niche scenarios.
The numbers in the article says everything.
Also, 16 core ARM vs x86 Xeon price is what at similar performance?
So there. Fact.
but that given the current state of the 14nm processes on which this would be manufactured, there's simply no way for them to know how power-sippy the final, mass-produced products will be.
Why is that ??? TSMC 16nm FF+ specs are finalized and if im not mistaken there are already ARM Tapeouts on the TSMC 16nm FF. Also mass production of TSMC 16nm FF starts in Q3 2015. So at this point products power consumption will be known.
As to the argument about ARM not being a magic bullet, I do agree with this - it will certainly not displace x86/64 where it is strongest (Windows/legacy win32). But new markets and form factors have already and continue to come into play. Chrome OS devices are one of them as I mentioned (the NaCl based ARC may be more favourable to native ARM code given its market share in certain programs, e.g. Drastic DS emulator).
Another form factor is Android or other mobile OS that does the Ubuntu thing and gives us a full desktop when plugged into a USB-C dock.
ARM may not be the magic bullet that hits x86 from the front, but from the side as other platforms built on it eat into x86 Windows market share.
This is in my opinion a major reason why MS is pulling out all stops to get people to migrate to Windows 10, because the transition to higher performance ARM designs coupled with increasingly capable Android and Chrome platforms are threatening their own market share.
On the other hand, something like VISC will probably come along and disrupt everything anyway. Wouldnt that be great? A hypervisor running full ISA compatible Android when in mobile mode, and switching to Windows full fat when connected to video dock - thats dual boot id pay for.
Another A72 article up:
http://techreport.com/review/28189/inside-arm-cortex-a72-microarchitecture
The Core M in question is also in the form of the Dell Venue Pro.
Venue Pro's one of the weaker Core M implementations, isn't it?
Venue Pro's one of the weaker Core M implementations, isn't it?
Another A72 article up:
http://techreport.com/review/28189/inside-arm-cortex-a72-microarchitecture
The Core M in question is also in the form of the Dell Venue Pro.
Why do people think ARM is some magic bullet that is going to "kill" the Intel / AMD x86 market?
It is a RISC instruction set (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARM_architecture), nothing more, nothing less.
We live in an x86 world (ARM gets to have cell phones, whoop de do), and not much, if anything is going to change its dominance.
In my world Intel is a niche product (laptop, desktop, workstation and server) and ARM is the dominating ISA. 2013 about 10 billion CPUs with ARM cores was sold, that is about 20 times more than Intel. The growth is in new areas where Intel has almost no control or market share. So Intels dominance for CPUs in general does not even exist today, only in a few small segments (but very profitable segments though).
Venue Pro's one of the weaker Core M implementations, isn't it?
But what happens now is that they intersect in certain segments, like tablets, home servers and micro servers.The two segments are not remotely comparable. Intel ships high performance chips. ARM sells the vast majority of its chips for coffee makers and such.
Its like saying that company A dominates the medical industry because they sell 100 million bandages yearly while company B, selling 100 MRI machines is a bit player. The two companies sell to radically different market segments and have very different business strategies.
It's also the closest to a typical ARM tablet- 11" chassis, slim, no fan.
