Comment Re:Most of these "datacenter sales" (Score 1) 36
Aside from architecture holy wars; this is the main reason why server CPUs are still offered in very low core counts(along with some specialty parts that are all about frequency and single thread performance; or low-ish core count parts that are aligned with specific common licensing schemes):
Your big database or mostly-cached web server, say, is still going to need a whole bunch of RAM and some high speed networking, possibly storage, so you are basically buying a big fat memory controller and lots of PCIe lanes; at which point the percentage of the silicon that is 8-16 86 cores vs. something else starts to look a lot less interesting compared to that 12 channel DDR5 controller and 128 lanes of PCIe; which would need to be there regardless of architecture.
Obviously the existence of actually-viable server ARM puts some limits on Intel and AMD's ability to play pricing games(at least against large customers); but, if anything, it's the computationally lightweight stuff where I/O is going to be a huge chunk of the package(literally and figuratively).
Your big database or mostly-cached web server, say, is still going to need a whole bunch of RAM and some high speed networking, possibly storage, so you are basically buying a big fat memory controller and lots of PCIe lanes; at which point the percentage of the silicon that is 8-16 86 cores vs. something else starts to look a lot less interesting compared to that 12 channel DDR5 controller and 128 lanes of PCIe; which would need to be there regardless of architecture.
Obviously the existence of actually-viable server ARM puts some limits on Intel and AMD's ability to play pricing games(at least against large customers); but, if anything, it's the computationally lightweight stuff where I/O is going to be a huge chunk of the package(literally and figuratively).