Diane Bryant of Intel took control of the chip giant’s data centre business at an important time in the industry.
The rise of cloud computing, virtualisation, big data, mobility and other trends has rapidly changed the dynamics in the data centre and expanded the field of competitors in a part of the industry that has been dominated by Intel and its x86-based processors.
Where once power was the key consideration for data centre systems and the processors that run them, a growing emphasis is now being placed on energy efficiency. And the list of competitors, which for a long time was pretty much Advanced Micro Devices, IBM and Oracle/Sun Microsystems, now includes ARM and its roster of licensees, including Calxeda, Marvell Technologies and Applied Micro.
The data centre will remain Intel’s domain, she said.
“We have all the products in our product line to cover all the workloads,” Bryant said in a recent wide-ranging interview with eWEEK in Cambridge, Mass.
For years, Intel, AMD and other chip makers would release processors, system makers would put them in their servers and organisations would buy the servers and put them into their data centres. In recent years, with virtualisation and cloud computing, big data and mobility, end users are looking for systems that can handle particular workloads. Now the focus for chip makers is creating processors designed for those workloads.
For Intel, that means offering its Xeon chips for larger, traditional data centre tasks, and low-power Atom systems-on-a-chip (SoCs) for microservers for high-density cloud environments, storage and communications jobs. In addition, Intel’s Xeon Phi coprocessors are aimed at highly parallel workloads found in high-performance computing (HPC) environments.
It also means more competition. Not only does Intel still compete with AMD in the traditional server space, but with the Xeon Phi coprocessors, the company now vies with GPU accelerators from AMD and Nvidia. In addition, ARM, whose low-power SoCs can be found in most smartphones and tablets, and such partners as Calxeda and Marvell Technologies see an opportunity in the microserver space, particularly once chips based on its 64-bit ARMv8 architecture start coming out next year.
AMD also will begin building ARM-based server chips in 2014. Andrew Feldman, corporate vice president and general manager of AMD’s Server Business Unit, said in an interview in May that ARM could account for as much as 20 percent of the server chip market by 2016.
Intel’s Bryant isn’t so sure. The microserver space itself is about 10 percent of the overall server market, and when ARMv8 SoCs begin hitting the market, Intel will already be on its second-generation Atom server chip, dubbed “Avoton.” In addition, Intel already offers the operating system support, middleware, developer toolkits and application support most organizations rely on. It’s also expensive to create such an ecosystem, and to be able to come out with new products on a regular basis.
“Our job is to make sure we do cover the entire spectrum,” Bryant said.
Page: 1 2
Targetting AWS, Microsoft? British competition regulator soon to announce “behavioural” remedies for cloud sector
Move to Elon Musk rival. Former senior executive at X joins Sam Altman's venture formerly…
Bitcoin price rises towards $100,000, amid investor optimism of friendlier US regulatory landscape under Donald…
Judge Kaplan praises former FTX CTO Gary Wang for his co-operation against Sam Bankman-Fried during…
Explore the future of work with the Silicon In Focus Podcast. Discover how AI is…
Executive hits out at the DoJ's “staggering proposal” to force Google to sell off its…