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Category Archives for "The Next Platform"

IBM Uses Power10 CPU As An I/O Switch

Back in early July, we covered the launch of IBM’s entry and midrange Power10 systems and mused about how Big Blue could use these systems to reinvigorate an HPC business rather than just satisfy the needs of the enterprise customers who run transaction processing systems and are looking to add AI inference to their applications through matrix math units on the Power10 chip.

IBM Uses Power10 CPU As An I/O Switch was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

More People Using More Data Means Wrestling With Exponential Complexity

If there is one job that system architects are always doing, it is to make highly complex data and the applications that chew on it easier to use, thus making that data more accessible to more people and more applications in an ever-expanding virtuous cycle.

More People Using More Data Means Wrestling With Exponential Complexity was written by Jeffrey Burt at The Next Platform.

Google Follows Suit With Microsoft On Ampere Arm Instances

A long time ago, when we first started The Next Platform, Urs Hölzle, then senior vice president of the Technical Infrastructure team at Google, told us that to gain a 20 percent improvement in price/performance it would absolutely change from the X86 architecture to Power architecture – or indeed any other architecture – and even for one generation of machines.

Google Follows Suit With Microsoft On Ampere Arm Instances was written by Timothy Prickett Morgan at The Next Platform.

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