- Mar 10, 2006
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Jaguar is good. Like, really good. In terms of single threaded performance, this thing is probably the fastest low-power core that'll be available on the market. Sure it doesn't have super deep active-idle states, but does this really matter for a micro-server, where the chip will probably be at full load most of the time?
Could somebody help me understand what technical reasons - if any - exist for AMD to have chosen the ARM A57 rather than the Jaguar for this new "Seattle" SoC? From a business standpoint, I suppose going under the ARM banner could drum up some hype, but I feel as though X86 is an ASSET in this space, not a detriment.
My hypothesis is that SeaMicro had this Seattle chip in development BEFORE they were bought by AMD, particularly given the time-frame of the launch.
Thoughts?
Could somebody help me understand what technical reasons - if any - exist for AMD to have chosen the ARM A57 rather than the Jaguar for this new "Seattle" SoC? From a business standpoint, I suppose going under the ARM banner could drum up some hype, but I feel as though X86 is an ASSET in this space, not a detriment.
My hypothesis is that SeaMicro had this Seattle chip in development BEFORE they were bought by AMD, particularly given the time-frame of the launch.
Thoughts?
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