Market now ready for the 32/64-bit Xeons
Market now ready for the 32/64-bit Xeons
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Xeon sales hit two million

Intel's combined 32/64-bit more popular than first thought

Iain Thomson, vnunet.com 11 Feb 2005
ADVERTISEMENT

Intel predicts that it will ship two million combined 32/64-bit Xeon processors by the end of the month, and has promised to extend the range.

The company sold its first million units in six months and has sold the second million in three. Shipments for the new chips overtook pure 32-bit versions in the last quarter of 2004.

"This ramp up is good news; we're executing on all cylinders," said Kirk Skaugen, general manager at Intel's enterprise platforms group.

"By the end of February we'll have shipped two million units of the 32/64bit Xeon. Demand is very strong; we shipped one million in the first six months that it was available."

Barely a year ago Intel was claiming that there was no demand for combined 32/64-bit processors and was sticking to its policy of making separate 32- or 64-bit chips.

But the company has changed its tune and now insists that increased operating system support from Microsoft and lower prices for DRam means that the market is ready for the combination chips.

Intel now expects 80 per cent of the Xeons shipped this quarter to be the combined 32/64-bit version.

The company is also extending the line with two newly developed Xeons, codenamed Potomac and Cranford. Potomac has increased L3 cache for faster data handling, while Cranford has a smaller cache at 1MB but runs at higher frequencies to compensate and is designed as an entry level processor.

The Xeons are designed to work in a quad-processor servers and will be part of the new 8500 chipset. They will launch officially in the next three months.

See also:

New chipset provides significant reduction in memory latencyX3 architecture promises 38 per cent performance gain  23 Feb 2005
Improved performance and securityFocus on 64-bit and multi-core technologies  16 Feb 2005
Intel to build combination 32/64-bit PentiumsGamers get the best at last  11 Feb 2005
Intel completes initial multi-core production runsSystems due in the second quarter of this year  08 Feb 2005
Vanderpool will boost manageability and securityGartner warns technology must be carefully managed  27 Jan 2005
Virtualisation allows a platform to run multiple operating systemsVanderpool or bust  21 Jan 2005

All Chips & Components

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
Senior C# Agile Web Developer, Online Gaming, London My Client provides adult customers with high quality gambling and gaming services in an environment that is convenient, entertaining, fair, regulated and secure. My Client is one ... more >
| Aston Carter
EMC, NetApps, West London, Media • NetApps FAS ... more >
| Abraxas
Data Analyst / MI Analyst – Leading Online Gaming Company A Data Analyst / Trafficker is sought by a leading online gaming company. The role encompasses all aspects of online advertising including data handling, communicating ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Field Applications Engineer Power Electronics/Supplies Europe/Based Surrey Permanent Position £35-45k Basic+Bonus 10-15%+Car/Car allowance A global organisation involved with the design and development of power supplies actively requires a Field Applications Engineer to strengthen it existing ... more >
More job opportunities