On BNET: Online porn struggles for profits
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Tom Krazit
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 26, 2006 7:01:00 PM

SAN FRANCISCO--Intel formally unveiled its Xeon 5100 series processors on Monday, releasing to customers one of its most anticipated and important products in recent years.

At a launch event here, Intel added little to the Xeon 5100 story that hasn't already been told. The chip, formerly known as Woodcrest, is based on a new microarchitecture that the company is counting on to improve the performance of its flagging server division.

"We're back. We're back to a position we're used to having," said Tom Kilroy, the general manager of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group.

Intel's server group hasn't been able to make such a claim in years. The Opteron processor has vaulted rival Advanced Micro Devices from the hinterlands of the server market to a more than 20 percent share, with its superior performance and power consumption.

Server partners lined up to support Intel's launch. They included all its major customers, such as Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Dell. Intel plans to make the transition to Woodcrest the fastest introduction of a new product in the company's history, Kilroy said, underscoring Intel's need for a competitive product.

Intel believes it has turned the tide on performance, citing 25 benchmarks where it holds a lead over AMD. The features of Intel's new Core microarchitecture, such as a larger and more sophisticated cache memory design and a faster connection to memory, are responsible for the boost in performance over Intel's older dual-core server processors, Kilroy said.

But Intel and AMD are also focusing on the somewhat fuzzy performance-per-watt metric, as they jostle to become known as the least electricity-hungry vendor. They have engaged in a battle of PowerPoint slides claiming superior energy efficiency, but now that Xeon 5100 series systems are available for customers to test in their own environments, a clearer picture should start to emerge.

"There should be a focus on energy efficiency, but it should not come at the expense of performance," Kilroy said.

Power consumption is extremely important to the developers at Pixar working on their next movie, said Greg Brandeau, the vice president of technology at the animation studio. Pixar compared preproduction servers using the Xeon 5100 processors with machines using older Intel products. It found it could provide the same level of computing power to its developers in one-third of the space needed to house the older servers, and with half as much power consumption, Brandeau said.

Pixar has both Opteron and Xeon processors in its server rooms, Brandeau said. The company uses an internal benchmark based on its Renderman technology to evaluate processor performance, adding the best-performing chip at the moment when it needs to increase computing capacity. Right now, Pixar is planning to purchase systems based on Woodcrest and Cloverton, a quad-core processor scheduled to emerge next year, he said.

Some server customers are also excited about the built-in hardware support for virtualization software that comes along with the Woodcrest processors, Kilroy said. Virtualization technology allows IT managers to run separate virtual environments on a single processor, eliminating the need for dedicated servers to run a particular application.

So, in addition to reducing their power bills, IT managers will be able to get rid of excess systems that take up time and space, said Nathan Brookwood, an analyst at Insight 64.

The average server's utilization rate is extremely low, somewhere around 13 percent. Servers based on Intel's older processors still consumed a great deal of power even when they were running at low utilization rates, he said. Virtualization technology will condense more applications onto a single server.

The question now for Intel is whether the new chips can help the company halt its market share losses at the hands of AMD.

"We know who we've lost, and we know why we lost it," Kilroy said in an interview after his presentation. "Eight out of 10 shipments are still Intel, despite the fact that we've been performance-challenged and performance-per-watt-challenged. Many customers are still buying, despite the fact we fell behind."

Intel is shipping several different versions of the Xeon 5100 processor, at clock speeds up to 3GHz. The most powerful chip consumes 85 watts of power, but others will use 65 watts of power, the company said in a release. A 40-watt version running at 2.33GHz is planned for the third quarter, Kilroy said.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 30 Talkback(s)
If the new Intel processors are that good Intel
would have been screaming that all day long from the "top floor of their building".

All this appears to be an injection of rumours of for WHAT INTEL IS GOING TO ACCOMPLISH EVENTUALLY AFTER the... (Read the rest)
Posted by: michael_t Posted on: 06/28/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Intel should let the processors do the talking and stop bragging.  DonnieBoy | 06/26/06
DonnieBoy that's exactly what they are going to do .  Intellihence | 06/26/06
Let them brag  John Zern | 06/26/06
One little problem  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/26/06
They did, that is the purpose of benchmarks.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/26/06
INDEPENDANT benchmarks needed  mad.mutt | 06/26/06
Explain more please  yyuko@... | 06/26/06
Ya...well...as long as the benchmark programs...  Feldwebel Wolfenstool | 06/26/06
did you look?  doh123 | 06/26/06
Server/workstation  doh123 | 06/26/06
benchmarks  ck123 | 06/28/06
Long live the Intel Market !  Intellihence | 06/26/06
Lets Go Intel!  Ediseye | 06/26/06
What a remarkable "accomplishment" !  michael_t | 06/26/06
Seems you're a tech newbie  Prognosticator | 06/26/06
A few minor corrections  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/26/06
I am sorry to see that you shoot your self in the foot...  michael_t | 06/26/06
what a loser....  JoeMama_z | 06/26/06
Kudos! this is a rare admission of your "special condition" wink  michael_t | 06/27/06
What will destroy Intel first: Their hype or their reputation?  Mr. Roboto | 06/26/06
Lots of anger towards Intel  JakAttak | 06/26/06
Not really.  Prognosticator | 06/26/06
Independent bench marks....  JoeMama_z | 06/26/06
heh....  JoeMama_z | 06/26/06
'[]' and "http://..." work only, Einstein ... wink  michael_t | 06/27/06
Complain allk you like but AMD is toast.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/26/06
Why dont you stop bragging  Uralbas | 06/27/06
You associate Intel with Windows  Boot_Agnostic | 06/27/06
Intel  Uralbas | 06/27/06
If the new Intel processors are that good Intel  michael_t | 06/28/06

What do you think?

Click Here
advertisement
Premier Vendor Content Whitepapers, webcasts & resources from our Power Center Sponsors
Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online - Free Six-Month Trial for Eligible Organizations
Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online provides fast online access, simple contact management and better sales performance for a low monthly cost - the best value on the market today.
Learn more about the free, six-month trial offer>>
Reduce risk. Reduce complexity. Increase reliability.
A simplified IT environment isn't just less complex. It's also more reliable. Standardize on a single Linux platform with SUSE Linux Enterprise from Novell, and get the world's most interoperable Linux
Learn more >>
The best support in the Linux business
If Linux is going to power your mission-critical applications, you'd better have the best support known to business. Novell was rated the top provider of Linux technical support.
Learn more >>
Reduce risk. Reduce complexity. Increase reliability.
A simplified IT environment isn't just less complex. It's also more reliable. Standardize on a single Linux platform with SUSE Linux Enterprise from Novell, and get the world's most interoperable Linux
Learn more >>
Learn more about tools to grow your business
The Business Essentials Guide provides you useful tools and templates to help grow your business and save you time with automated shipping solutions.
Save time with the UPS Business Essentials Guide
The more you simplify, the more you save
When you transition from your existing Red Hat environment to SUSE Linux Enterprise from Novell, you can recognize dramatic cost savings, perhaps as much 50%
Learn more >>

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads