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faichai | 2 years ago

> that eventually disrupted the market leadership of Intel’s 64-bit Itanium chips

Erm, Itanium never had any kind of market leadership. It was a failure.

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nordsieck|2 years ago

> Erm, Itanium never had any kind of market leadership. It was a failure.

That's true. But part of the reason Itanium as a failure is because AMD came out with x86-64, which was so successful that Intel ended up being forced to adopt it (it didn't help that the first generation of Itanium chips was... underwhelming).

Sakos|2 years ago

I think the general consensus is that AMD could only swoop in as it did because Itanium was such a disaster of epic proportions, both technically and on a management level. There was no way Itanium was ever going to be successful. x86-64 was just the final nail in the coffin.