Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
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Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
key takeaway after spending yrs on sw industry: big issue small because everyone jumps on it and fixes it. small issue is big since everyone ignores and it causes catastrophy later. #devilisinthedetails
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
If it was Apple it might be more newsworthy. But it isn't.
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
Well, I wish them luck, but I'm not holding my breath. The CPU market is about the most expensive market to break into, and it appears they want to build server processors out of ARM chips or something. Sorry, but no-one will switch architectures just for them. So they are only going to get into new datacenters (if that), not upgrade existing ones.
Yeah, sorry, I really don't see a path to success for these guys. Not a realistic one, anyway.
Yeah, sorry, I really don't see a path to success for these guys. Not a realistic one, anyway.
Carpe diem!
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Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
i would not underestimate Apple's prowess giving how much money they got (+), and article stating how smart engineer they got with years of experience designing low power processor and leverage using their knowledge (+) toward this. But if only market responds to these.
I do remember AMD tried in the past acquiring seamicro and there are probably other efforts too and even reverse efforts (Intel training to get into Mobile and wasted billions) so I dont count on it to be successful.
I do remember AMD tried in the past acquiring seamicro and there are probably other efforts too and even reverse efforts (Intel training to get into Mobile and wasted billions) so I dont count on it to be successful.
key takeaway after spending yrs on sw industry: big issue small because everyone jumps on it and fixes it. small issue is big since everyone ignores and it causes catastrophy later. #devilisinthedetails
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
There are two problems here: For one, this isn't Apple, this is a bunch of people who used to work there. For two, knowledge of low-power CPU design is unlikely to help with datacenter CPUs where power is rarely an issue. Just as experience designing a sports car engine will likely not help in design a semi-truck engine. You have to optimize for completely different parameters.ggodw000 wrote:i would not underestimate Apple's prowess giving how much money they got (+), and article stating how smart engineer they got with years of experience designing low power processor and leverage using their knowledge (+) toward this. But if only market responds to these.
I do remember AMD tried in the past acquiring seamicro and there are probably other efforts too and even reverse efforts (Intel training to get into Mobile and wasted billions) so I dont count on it to be successful.
You want to design a mobile CPU for as little power use as possible. Latency may be a close second. A server CPU however doesn't care about power use (as much) and is more interested in throughput than latency.
Carpe diem!
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
It's not Apple.ggodw000 wrote:i would not underestimate Apple's
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
Normally I would agree, but the market is awaiting server ARM CPUs for years now, so there's definitely a niche here. More than 90% of the servers are running some kind of Linux, and ARM support in Linux is old and mature. Changing the arch in this specific case wouldn't be a big deal.nullplan wrote:Sorry, but no-one will switch architectures just for them.
I'm not so sure about that. You have no clue how horribly huge electric bills some company get every month.nullplan wrote:For two, knowledge of low-power CPU design is unlikely to help with datacenter CPUs where power is rarely an issue.
I agree, and you're right that power usage often lowered by sacrificing latency on mobiles. Small latency and large thourhgput is much more important for server CPUs, however power consumption is also. Lowering the electric bill means maximizing the profit, something that all IT companies are interested in, which creates a potential market for these guys. Imho ARM itself is perfectly capable to make similar throughput and latency as current server CPUs (maybe even better, considering the simpler instruction decoding and RISC nature). So the real question is how the SoC is manufactured.nullplan wrote:You want to design a mobile CPU for as little power use as possible. Latency may be a close second. A server CPU however doesn't care about power use (as much) and is more interested in throughput than latency.
I wish them luck, and I hope existing companies won't kill them in their early state.
Cheers,
bzt
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Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
I wonder asiansjack wrote:It's not Apple.
and Apple is just going to let these guys use their intellectual property. This might eventually turn out to be a crowd funding scam or Apple has got their fingers in the pie somewhere.Three of Apple Inc’s former top semiconductor executives in charge of iPhone chips have founded a startup to design processors for data centers, aiming to take on current industry leaders Intel Corp and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
They've already got $53 million funding - some fom Dell, none from Apple. I doubt they'll be going for crowd funding. https://www.anandtech.com/show/15115/nu ... cpu-market
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Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
I sort of misread however the title can be a bit misleading. I dont expect anything from Dell to be successful.
Of course it could potentially provide some alternatives but I just dont see a need for ARM chips in datacenter.
Of course it could potentially provide some alternatives but I just dont see a need for ARM chips in datacenter.
key takeaway after spending yrs on sw industry: big issue small because everyone jumps on it and fixes it. small issue is big since everyone ignores and it causes catastrophy later. #devilisinthedetails
- Kazinsal
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Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
Clearly not, considering that several companies have been shipping ARM server cores and all we've seen out of it is AWS getting ARM instances based on Cortex-A72s, Huawei going "look at us we can make ARM CPUs too", and a few OEMs pumping out their own whitebox ARM servers based on Marvell's reference designs from a year and a half ago.bzt wrote:Normally I would agree, but the market is awaiting server ARM CPUs for years now, so there's definitely a niche here.
Dell has been leading in server market share for quite some time. The only company that's punching quite at their level is HPE. Clearly they're doing something right.ggodw000 wrote:I dont expect anything from Dell to be successful.
Though, that being said, if they put more than a "fine here's some money go away and call us when you have returns" funding round of fifty million into this, then they're going to lose their lead to HPE and they're going to deserve it.
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
There might be some ARM servers already, however there's a lot to consider for a big company. OEM-trust, TCO, manageability, support, part replacement service, etc. Most of today's ARM servers are terrible at those, they are basically really nothing more than "look at us we can make ARM". I know it from personal experience that there's a need for ARM, but currently there's none that could fulfill a big IT company's expectation (not necessarily hardware-wise, although current ARM servers are not as performant as Intel servers and their IO throughput is laughable, but also concerning everything else). And frankly, I don't think that Intel is letting anyone bite out of their server market share easily, specially since they've lost the mobile segment and ARM is trying to break into the desktop segment too (and not succeed only because Win support for ARM is not really mature enough, and not because the hardware manufacturers couldn't keep up).Kazinsal wrote:Clearly not, considering that several companies have been shipping ARM server cores and all we've seen out of it is AWS getting ARM instances based on Cortex-A72s, Huawei going "look at us we can make ARM CPUs too", and a few OEMs pumping out their own whitebox ARM servers based on Marvell's reference designs from a year and a half ago.
But if Dell backs these guys, and they really could produce a low-power ARM CPU that is in parallel with (or above the) current Intel chips, that could be a game changer. Imagine how much an ARM server could do using the same power as an Intel based server. I think in order to succeed, they'll need a flagship, for example github switching to ARM or something like that. Without a serious reference, no big IT companies would trust these new servers. We'll see. I still wish them good luck
Cheers,
bzt
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
Latest on this story is that Apple are now suing the CEO of this startup. https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/12/0 ... _ceo_suit/
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
Apple has been in the CPU business, and then pulled their plug on PowerPC in favor of x86... so why should they even want to go back to "rolling their own"?
Every good solution is obvious once you've found it.
Re: Apple getting into CPU business, will they succeed?
Reasons are rarely easy to spot from the outside in big business. Sometimes it's literaly just the current fashion which itself is based on flawed reasoning. I remember reading of a "diversification is bad" trend which did a lot of harm for no good reason. One huge company failed due to lots of poor decisions, it was blamed on diversification, and for the next decade investors everywhere refused to allow their companies to diversify.
As for power, it's been a while since I looked, but I'm pretty sure I've seen datacenters offering discounts for cohosting laptops rather than full PCs with low power consumption cited as the reason. I know there are "green datacenters" using low power consumption as a marketing point. ARM instruction decoding takes less power than x86. Mobile CPUs in general may have slower floating point support; how many servers need it?
As for power, it's been a while since I looked, but I'm pretty sure I've seen datacenters offering discounts for cohosting laptops rather than full PCs with low power consumption cited as the reason. I know there are "green datacenters" using low power consumption as a marketing point. ARM instruction decoding takes less power than x86. Mobile CPUs in general may have slower floating point support; how many servers need it?
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