ARM server built by Taiwanese manufacturer MiTAC revealed
- 05 June, 2012 08:36
- Comments
ARM on Tuesday showed a server using its processors built by Taiwanese manufacturer MiTAC, which will join U.S. makers Dell and Hewlett-Packard in producing ARM-based servers.
The GFX Server uses 1.6GHz ARM processors and is ready to run a version of the Linux-based Ubuntu operating system, which ARM showed in a live demonstration at the Computex exhibition in Taiwan.
ARM is a U.K. company that licenses processor designs to chip makers. Its designs are often used in mobile phones and other consumer electronics. The firm is targeting the lucrative server space, but acknowledged Tuesday that its processors will initially be best suited for less intensive tasks.
"Certainly web serving, what I would call middle-tier applications, like mem-cache is a good fit, and offline analytics," said Ian Ferguson, director of server systems at ARM.
ARM said the newly revealed server has a 4U rackmount chassis, with 64 ARM processors for a total of 256 cores.
ARM said the 32-bit server chips will go on sale this year, and Applied Micro will release the first 64-bit ARM platforms for servers in late 2013. Processors based on the ARMv8 platform will be released in 2014.
ARM is working to crack the server market, which is booming as companies expand their cloud-based services, but the company's architecture still lags behind rivals from Intel and AMD. While a majority of smartphone and tablet software is written for ARM processors, very little server software is being written for the architecture.
Still, the LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP) software stack has also been optimized for ARM, and Hadoop, Openstack and Java have also been optimized for ARM.
Dell has announced a low-power server with ARM processors. Hewlett-Packard has announced ARM-based server designs and chip maker Nvidia has mixed its Tegra 3 chips and graphics processors in a Barcelona supercomputer.
Computex, which runs this week in Taipei, is one of Asia's largest consumer electronics and component exhibitions.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- In Pictures: Google I/O 2013's coolest products and services
- Report: Yahoo board approves deal to buy Tumblr for $US1.1bn
- Dell's thumb PC, Project Ophelia, to ship in July
- IT doesn’t see much value in making Windows 8 enterprise standard: Forrester
- BT Financial embraces BI to better understand customers
-
Spiceworks' free management software gets integrated MDM
-
Opinion: Why national e-health is not for everyone
-
Opinion: Why national e-health is not for everyone
-
Opinion: Why national e-health is not for everyone
-
Opinion: Why national e-health is not for everyone
-
Customer Success - Slater & Gordon Lawyers
Lawyers work hard, and they work fast. Any activity that takes their focus away from the task at hand represents lost productivity and lost revenue. Slater & Gordon Lawyers needed to filter spam and email-borne malware and provide high availability for email. Results from the business solution they chose include 250 hours of IT staff time reclaimed annually for other tasks, long delays in email delivery alleviated, reduced email-related storage costs, and email failover to the cloud in minutes, avoiding hours-long outages. Find out how they got these results. -
New Demands for Real-time Threat Management
Many organisations are evaluating a new security model based upon IT risk management best practices. This is a good idea, but not enough for today’s dynamic and malevolent threat landscape. To keep up with IT changes and external threats, large organisations need to embrace two new security practices: real-time risk management for day-to-day security adjustments and real-time threat management to detect and remediate sophisticated, stealthy, and damaging security breaches (i.e., advanced persistent threats, or APTs). Learn more. -
Six Reasons to Empower Your SharePoint Citizen Developers
More and more business applications are being created by “citizen developers” - end users who are not IT developers but who create solutions for themselves and their groups. This white paper explores six reasons to embrace citizen development in an intelligent way that minimises risks and maximises the return on your SharePoint investment. Read now.














