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Intel packs six cores into Xeon 7400 processors

Intel packs six cores into Xeon 7400 processors

By:  Briony Smith  On: 14 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The chipmaker's server line gets an update that's aimed at virtualization adopters. MySpace comments on the data centre demand while Forrester looks at the competition from AMD's Barcelona

Intel announced Monday its new a new Xeon processor line that boasts up to six processing cores per chip and is being pushed as a chip tailor-made for virtualization and multi-threaded processing.

The Intel Xeon Processor 7400 Series (formerly codenamed Dunnington) has 16MB of shared cache memory. Intel claims that the new chips can offer up to 50 per cent gains in productivity over older series. Platforms based on the new chips can scale up to 16 sockets, delivering servers with up to almost 100 processing cores. The 7400 series is based on Intel’s 45nm high-k process and Hafnium-based, high-k metal gate formula transistors. This gives a reduction in platform power of up to 10 per cent.

“Data demand is rising exponentially,” said Intel vice-president and general manager of the digital enterprise group Tom Kilroy in a teleconferenced roundtable discussion. “You still have a responsibility for requirements, application consistency, and supporting new bandwidth capability, so you can’t have a reliability issue there.”

MySpace vice-president of technical operations Richard Buckingham said that rapid growth has been a challenge for his data centre administration team. He said, “We’re a very young company, so we’ve had that rapid growth—with 12,000 servers, it’s a significant challenge.”

It isn’t the leap that some experts believed in a while back, as, Forrester Research analyst James Staten pointed out, it was originally thought that the number of cores would start to double with every release, making the logical step for the 7400 series to be an eight-core processor instead of only boasting six. Said Staten: “So it’s somewhat of a stopgap.” This could change, however, he said, once key software like Windows could keep up with a large jump in core numbers.

Intel’s new series follows on the heels of AMD’s recent announcement of its own six-core processor (codenamed Barcelona), which is due to be released next year. “This is an incremental improvement,” said Staten. “They’re both working on the same roadmap. It’s just more cores, which means more goodness.”

AMD won’t see any immediate converts from its own six-core processor, said Staten. “At this point, AMD needs to prove that it can consistently execute. Once Barcelona comes out and there’s two or three versions out…This is no doubt achievable in the long run, though, as it is a core focus of their CEO,” he said.

The products can hit frequencies of 2.66 GHz and power levels down to 50 watts, and are compatible with the Xeon 7300 series. HP, IBM, Sun, Dell, Fujitsu, Hitachi, NEC, Supermicro, and Unisys are all on-board with the new chips.


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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