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Comments on: AMD grabs for the data centre with low-power server chip

I was wondering when they were turning up 

Posted Monday 12th May 2008 16:05 GMT

As the title implies, I was wondering when AMD would get around to a HE release. There were HE chips in the 200 and 800 series, after all. Unfortunately, I couldn't get hold of any at the time I built my rig, so I'm running the full fat 270s (with a couple of SI-128 heatsinks - they're not overheating any time soon!).

Clocks? 

Posted Monday 12th May 2008 17:20 GMT

Very nice article but what are the clock speeds?

And the cost will be ? 

Posted Monday 12th May 2008 20:56 GMT

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Let me guess ~£100 per CPU more than the non low voltage option. Thus making the LV chips a token gesture for companies rather than a real option.

Spend the bucks on planting trees.

AMD improving non-HE power specs? 

Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 08:33 GMT

Your article says: "The chip maker said that the high efficiency (HE) processors have a thermal envelope of 55 watts. That compares to the company’s other quad-core server chips that clock higher thermal envelopes of 105 watts or 75 watts."

Is that really correct? Is that a quote from the AMD release? If so then that "105W or 75W" statement is pretty significant news in itself because I thought the existing Barcelona (Phenom X4) CPUs were 125W (e.g. the 9850) or 95W (e.g. the 9650) and of course there's the 9750 wierdness where the retail version is rated at 125W and the OEM version at 95W.

Have AMD really reduced the power requirements on the non-HE lineup as well?

Re: And the cost will be... 

Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 08:36 GMT

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Given the impact on the electricity bill, that higher cost may well be acceptable... and I'll plant a few shrubberies just for good measure.

multicore hype 

Posted Friday 16th May 2008 01:18 GMT

AS general usage server rather than scientific research involve massive calculation's, any server more than 8 cores is a waste as in Desktop PC, since the applications and OS are origin written for mono or Duo, the excess cores have no extra house power. What we really need is work on the speed beyond 10 Ghz limits, Due core is more than sufficient with low power 10+ ghz cpu

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