By
Stephen Shankland
Friday, July 21 2006 10:36 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39376846,00.htm
IBM and Advanced Micro Devices are expected to announce an alliance that
will lead to mainstream IBM servers based on the Opteron processor, CNET
News.com has learned. It is a further boost to chipmaker AMD and a new blow to
rival Intel's server business.
The companies are expected to tout the partnership Aug. 1 at a New York event
featuring Hector Ruiz, AMD's chief executive, and Susan
Whitney, head of IBM's x86 server group, sources familiar with the event
said.
IBM and AMD are already partners--indeed, IBM was the first of the big four
server makers to endorse the Opteron processor. In addition, the two companies
share chip-manufacturing technology.
However, there is room for improvement. While rivals Hewlett-Packard and Sun
Microsystems have given Opteron first-class-citizen status, and even longtime
holdout Dell has announced Opteron server plans, IBM's Opteron servers were
geared for high-performance computing rather than for the mainstream business
market.
"IBM was the first company to jump into the pool with AMD's Opteron, but
they've always stayed at the shallow end," said Insight64 analyst Nathan
Brookwood.
AMD declined to comment for this story. IBM representatives didn't respond to
several requests for comment.
Opteron's successes haven't gone unnoticed at Big Blue. Bill
Zeitler, head of IBM's server group, said in April that HP and
Sun gained at IBM's expense because of their Opteron products. AMD-based
products, including IBM's own blades, generate more revenue because their higher
performance means customers buy them with more memory and other add-ons, Zeitler
said.
A tighter AMD partnership would make sense, said Envisioneering Group analyst
Richard Doherty.
"It's something that we've heard customers wanting IBM to explore for some
time now," Doherty said. IBM may have forborne tightening ties with AMD until
now because "they may have been afraid of injuring the Intel relationship," he
added.
Intel has suffered market share losses to AMD because of Opteron (though its
more-powerful Xeon 5100 "Woodcrest" chips are now coming to market). And it has
suffered financially: Its Digital Enterprise Group, which sells server chips,
saw its revenue decline 23 percent from US$6 billion in the second quarter of 2005
to US$4.6 billion in the second quarter of 2006.
August is a good time to buddy up with AMD. The chipmaker is expected to
debut its new dual-core "Rev F" Opteron products on Aug. 15. The new processor
generation will include virtualization features and will be easy to upgrade to
quad-core models in 2007. Sun, by far the most enthusiastic Opteron partner,
plans to announce new Rev F-based servers soon.
A deeper partnership between IBM and AMD could take several forms, ranging
from joint technology development to work on mainstream dual-processor servers.
It might even cover the creation of more-powerful multiprocessor machines that
could rival IBM's current Intel-based 32-processor, the System
x3950, formerly called the x460.
In the April interview, Zeitler specifically pointed to four-processor
servers as an area where AMD could have helped IBM. Although Intel has improved
performance with its dual-processor Xeon 5100 models, its forthcoming "Tulsa"
chip for four-processor machines is still based on the power-hungry and
discredited NetBurst lineage.
Dell's Opteron embrace thus far is limited to four-processor servers.