CFO Expectations of IT


Follow us





AMD wants to put four-socket servers everywhere

After a period when its Opteron processor gave Intel a rare bashing in the volume server sector, AMD has struggled of late to shrug off its reputation as the bridesmaid of microprocessors. Now, however, the firm has a new plan. I met Leslie Sobon, the company's VP, product and platform marketing, to talk about the chances of offering a serious alternative to the 800-pound gorilla of the chip industry.

Sobon, who joined from Dell four years ago, said she believes that the server market is moving to a new front that affords opportunities for AMD. 

"In the Nineties, the server market was all about performance, then it was performance-per-watt when everyone realised their datacentres were getting cramped and hot, and now you see another trend emerging which is price and value," she says.

That may sound like code for 'we can't beat Intel on speed' but Sobon has a point in that the rise of scale-out architectures, featuring racks of thin servers that are clustered and virtualised, probably places less importance on raw individual system performance so long as the performance-per-watt metric is maintained to allow machines to sip at electrical power.
Sobon, a Bostonian and huge fan of the Red Sox baseball team, is admirably frank about where AMD is batting today.

"A nine per cent share in servers is pretty much what you get for showing up," she says, unwittingly paraphrasing Bruce Forsyth's 'a point for sitting there' scoring on The Generation Game. "But one good thing is that there's nothing you're protecting. You have a blank sheet of paper. It's the only good thing!"

Details for forthcoming chips are not being disclosed publicly but Sobon says a large part of AMD's formula for grabbing server share from Intel will be to move four-socket (or '4P' as she calls them) machines from the rarefied air of the top-end of the volume server space into the mainstream where two-socket boxes predominate today, and emphasise performance-per-watt.

Sobon suggests that there has thus far been an unnecessarily high price tag on four-socket servers and that has to change.

"The 4P tax has arbitrarily kept the market very small at about five per cent of units and shrinking," she says. "We're asking 2P [servers] to do an awful lot here."

Of course, Intel could swat AMD by dropping prices but that sort of pricing trick is rendered less likely to occur by the EU's judgement last year that Intel had illegally used strong-arm tactics in order to maintain its dominant market share. Sobon also reasons that AMD's architecture -- whereby Bios, drivers and memory speeds are shared across processors -- makes it easier for the company to switch pricing and at the same time provide customers with the ability to move without affecting core infrastructure.

Of course, AMD has in the past suffered an unenviable reputation for failing to get product out the door as quickly and in sufficient numbers as buyers would like. But Sobon says that issue is a thing of the past, noting that the firm's 'Instanbul' and 'Shanghai' parts hit their schedules. (AMD codenames are based on Formula One Grand Prix motor racing circuits although she jokes that she has suggested names of flowers as an alternative.)

 

Part Two: Look, no sticker: AMD's Leslie Sobon and Intel Inside 


Add to Technorati Favorites


Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:

PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.


CIO White Papers

The cloud 2015 vision

Cloud computing is an important transition and a paradigm shift in IT services delivery - one that promises large gains in efficiency and flexibility at a time when demands on data centers are growing exponentially. The tools, building blocks, solutions, and best practices for cloud computing are evolving and challenges to deploying cloud solutions need to be considered.

The consumerisation of technology

iPads are the must-have fad. Android is the rising mobile platform -- Everywhere you turn, the news is about personal, smart, mobile devices and their impact on business and on IT.

Big data analytics

Broadly, there are two ways to think of Big Data technologies. The first is as an extension of what many organisations are already doing with business analytics. Gaining insight from business information is something that has been happening for decades, but the challenges and opportunities are now greater than ever before.

Virtualisation: benefits, challenges and solutions

The majority of organisations have already implemented server virtualisation and most intend to implement additional server virtualisation during the next year. The primary factors driving the movement to deploy server virtualisation are cost savings and the ability to dynamically provision and move VMs among physical servers. There are however, a number of significant challenges associated with server virtualisation.


CIO UK - Business - Technology - Leadership

On Demand Webcast
Analyse Data In Real Time


Increasingly businesses require the ability to analyse information quickly. Find out how to handle growing data volumes more efficiently while reducing the cost of managing your organisation's IT landscape

Watch now

SAP Logo

What do CFOs expect from IT?


Watch our sister publication's latest webcast.
Hear a case study from the Guardian News and Media's Technology Director, Andy Beale, and join the discussion on the role of the CFO in technology innovation.

Watch Discussion

CFO World webcast in assocation with Google

On Demand Webcast:
Maximising business flexibility with virtualisation


Register for this on demand webcast and find out how technologies can enable cost effective and secure virtualisation from your server deployments.



Watch now

Dell VMware logo


CFO Expectations of IT


* *