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azim | 15 years ago

I did software development for NonStop Kernel on Itanium for a few years. 5 years ago, Itanium was FAST. Our software was twice as fast as competitors who used twice as many processing cores. Problem was that, unlike x86, Intel's Itanium roadmap moves slow and continually plagued by problems. About 2-3 years ago, with cost reduction in mind, we began porting software over to Linux on x86. Initially we needed 2.5x as many x86 cores to reach the performance of the 1.6Ghz Itanium 2. By the time Intel began shipping Westmere-EP processors early in 2010, each core was nearly 1:1 with Itanium, and at half the cost and 3x the density.

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whatusername|15 years ago

Interesting. The NonStop has always intrigued me as a platform. Thanks.