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тАО02-26-2004 04:46 AM
тАО02-26-2004 04:46 AM
Itanium vs Opertron
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тАО02-26-2004 06:45 AM
тАО02-26-2004 06:45 AM
Re: Itanium vs Opertron
Here's a link to information about the Itanium-2. It's from an admittedly biased source - Intel's website:
http://www.intel.com/business/bss/products/server/itanium2/index.htm
here's a link to AMD's website for the Opteron processor:
http://www.amd.com/us-en/Processors/ProductInformation/0,,30_118_8796,00.html
HTH
Roger
Roger
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тАО02-26-2004 08:21 AM
тАО02-26-2004 08:21 AM
Re: Itanium vs Opertron
http://www.aceshardware.com/read.jsp?id=60000275
What I gather from what i've heard is that the Itanium 2 is directed at the higher-end server market, while the opteron is aimed for the desktop through 4-way windows CPU.
Itanium is:
more expensive
more scalable
fastest on TPC-C ratings
more cache (6MB compared with 1MB for opteron.)
Of course a big advantage is that the Itanium runs HP-UX, while the opteron doesn't.
Josh
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тАО02-26-2004 05:57 PM
тАО02-26-2004 05:57 PM
Re: Itanium vs Opertron
On the technical specifications side, the i advantage what i see for the Intel Itanium over AMD Operton is only a few.
1. Itanium2 has got something called L3 cache which varies from 3MB to 4MB to 6MB depending on the type of processor you are chosing.
2. HP-UX is supported by Itanium2 whereas AMD Opetron doesn't support
3. Itanium has less power dissipation compared to the AMD Opetron..
With best wishes.
naveej
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тАО02-26-2004 07:25 PM
тАО02-26-2004 07:25 PM
Re: Itanium vs Opertron
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тАО02-29-2004 12:58 AM
тАО02-29-2004 12:58 AM
Re: Itanium vs Opertron
The Intel Itanium2 and AMD Opteron processors are often incorrectly compared on the basis of one feature only : 64-bit environment.
The Opteron is a 64-bit extension to the existing x86 architecture. The Opteron is a way to have easy access to more than 4 GByte memory.
The Itanium2 processor has much more, such as EPIC (Explicit Parallel Instruction Computing, co-developped by Intel and HP), Predication (to eliminate the impact from mispredicted branches), Large Register Files (128 integer registers, instead of 16 for Opteron; 128 Floating-point registers, instead of 16), Scalability with the same processor (from uni-processor to 64-way today, instead of three type Opteron processors up to an 8-way today), etc ...
See also www.hp.com/go/itanium for some white papers.
Regards,
Nico