Not bad for a first cut. Kick-on Calxeda. :)
Calxeda unsheathes Midway ARM server steel to split Intel's Atom
ARM server upstart Calxeda has 'fessed up about the innards of its next wave of low-power server chips – but should Intel be worried? The "Midway" processor family, aka the ECX-2000, was announced today, and succeeds the ARM Cortex-A9-based ECX-1000 range. Calxeda has refined its system-on-a-chip (SoC) design so that it can …
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Monday 28th October 2013 21:14 GMT Roo
Re: How long
There's still room for Intel. They maintain a very large footprint in interconnect... USB, PCIExpress, Ethernet, Cray, and then there is all the optical I/O stuff they're developing.
Then there is all this talk of them helping people produce SoCs with their fabs, and people speculating that they may open up their fabs. They could do that too, and with the political climate at the moment they might even get some serious support for building fabs in mainland USA.
Sure, getting wiped out of the processor market would hurt a lot, but Intel have many very well developed facets, so I don't think they'll vanish, although it is certain they will evolve. :)
I can forgive Intel a lot after they put their weight behind USB & PCI. :)
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Monday 28th October 2013 22:18 GMT P. Lee
Re: How long
> Sure, getting wiped out of the processor market would hurt a lot, but Intel have many very well developed facets, so I don't think they'll vanish, although it is certain they will evolve. :)
The issue would be PC manufacturers putting cheap ARM chips into PC's as an "always-on" option. People might stop booting home PCs to check email, etc and it would drive desktop linux/arm application development, which might then impact intel quite a bit more.
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Monday 28th October 2013 22:26 GMT Frumious Bandersnatch
Seems a bit thirsty
The ODROID-XU has a very similar setup (also a 1.8GHz A7/A15 combo, though running in big.LITTLE mode), but it seems to only draw about 4 to 5 watts when fully loaded. I guess that the 100Gb network, extra RAM (assuming Calxeda's boards have more than 2Gb) and other peripheral devices (versus XU's USB3 + fan) could account for some of that, but 4x power consumption seems a lot.
Still, 20W is still most excellent for servers, and by the looks of it, they've still got room to bring that down either in the forthcoming board or the next one after that...
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Tuesday 29th October 2013 22:01 GMT Anonymous Coward
apologies if I'm being dense, but where does this leave [server] virtualisation...?
I'm guessing these aren't meant for virtualisation, Does the density and power consumption offer an *alternative* to virtualisation?
As I write this, there is an ad for an IBM System x3650 M4 server from 1,325 pounds incl VAT. It is a 2U server with 16 2.5" drive bays. In 12-18 months, imagine if those drive bays were *each* a self-contained server - 4 core AMD64 Atom processor, 16GB RAM, 128GB SSD, with the chassis now merely relegated to being a 10GB PoE switch, providing power and networking. 16 servers in a 2U chassis consuming 320W...
Provides an interesting alternative to paying VMware/Hyper-V. I *know* virtualisation offers a great deal, but the original big sell is density, capital and energy cost...
Will these ever emerge as consumer/SMB devices? The "cloud" is great for instant provisioning and infinite scalability, but you do pay. Imagine a box the size of a DVD player that is
- FTTC/FTTP modem
- UTM firewall
- Exchange/Lync/SharePoint or Sendmail/Jabber/Apache/Samba if you prefer
- 802.11ac wireless
Plug it into your broadband and do it on premises, relegating cloud to backup.
A sort of Cobalt Qube (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cobalt_Qube) for the 21st century. Plug and play, relatively cheap yet fabulously powerful.
Oh the possibilities...
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Thursday 31st October 2013 20:31 GMT hfp
They just purposely picked SKUs out of Intel's range of Atom platforms
They just purposely picked SKUs out of Intel's range of Atom platforms that allow highlighting their supposed to be unique features. One may pick an Atom (also codenamed 'Silvermont') from the 'Rangeley' platform:
http://ark.intel.com/products/family/71264/Intel-Atom-Processor-for-Communications/embedded
Such a SoC would carry more than enough with respect to the "broad set of I/O controllers, 10Gbps Ethernet". Also, the BIG.little concept just makes the part described in the article somehow heterogeneous (which is kind of unsatisfactory given that it is supposed to make things simpler).