two
Volume 4, Number 5 -- February 7, 2007

AMD Delivers Faster and Cooler Rev F Opteron Chips

Published: February 7, 2007

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

Advanced Micro Devices will today crank the clock another notch on its dual-core Rev F Opteron processors, raising the top speed of the chips to 2.8 GHz. And because AMD is in a price and technology war with Intel, AMD will be giving customers that extra 200 MHz of performance at the same price as it charged for its 2.6 GHz parts and will cut prices across the line as it shifts its bins.

As part of the launch of faster Rev F processors, AMD is also expanding the options customers have to buy lower-voltage versions of the Opteron parts, which run at cooler temperatures but which also run at the same clock speeds as standard Opteron parts. A faster dual-core Athlon AM2 processor for single-socket workstations and servers is also going to be announced today.

"We are delivering more performance per dollar and more performance per watt, and we are delivering on our dual-core processor roadmap," says Steve Demski, Opteron product manager at AMD.

There are two new Rev F Opterons that run at the faster 2.8 GHz clock speed, both of which have a maximum thermal design point (TDP) of 95 watts. (It always bears reminding that the Opteron design has an integrated DDR2 main memory controller, so be careful when comparing to Intel's Xeon 5100 and 5300 processors, which do not have memory controllers on the chip. Such memory controllers can add 20 to 25 watts to the thermal envelope.) The Opteron 8220 costs $1,514 in 1,000-unit quantities, while the Opteron 2220 costs $698.

The Opteron 2220 is a Rev F chip that plugs into two-socket motherboards, while the Opteron 8220 plugs into boards that support four sockets. In some cases, server makers scale multiple four-socket boards to make larger machines, but Sun's high-end "Galaxy" 4600 server, which has eight sockets, does not do this. That machine uses eight Opteron 8000 series processors, each one fit on its own board with main memory and I/O--akin to the uniboard design that Sun created for its Sparc-based servers many years ago.

For customers who need fast Opteron processors, but who have energy consumption, heating, and cooling issues, AMD is announcing two variants of its low-voltage Highly Efficient, or HE parts. These chips have a 68-watt TDP. The Opteron 8218 runs at 2.6 GHz and costs $1,340, while the Opteron 2218 runs at the same speed and costs $611. (Again, the 8000 series chips are for machines with four or more CPU sockets, while the 2000 series are for two-socket boxes.) The current top-end HE parts run at 2.4 GHz, and span down to 2.2 GHz in four-socket machines and down to 2 GHz in two-socket machines.

For single-socket machines, there are five new Rev F Opteron HE parts that have a 65-watt TDP, as well as an Althon part that runs at 2.8 GHz but which burns at a 103-watt TDP. Rev F Opteron HE parts span from the Opteron 1210 HE, which runs at 1.8 GHz and costs $168, to the Opteron 1218, which runs at 2.6 GHz and costs $432. Those building servers or workstations on small form factor boards with a single AM2 socket (which is a variant of the old 940-pin Opteron Rev E socket) can buy the Opteron 1220, which is really an Athlon X2 with a different brand on it. This 2.8 GHz part costs $545.

While power and cooling issues are on the minds of IT managers and server makers these days, and while AMD is to be commended for taking the time to create the Opteron HE parts several years ago and then taking away the huge price disparity it used to charge, the chips have not yet taken the market by storm. "The 95-watt parts are mostly what we sell," explains Demski. "If you get outside of California, New York, and other high-density areas where space is expensive and so is electricity, people are still mostly price sensitive, not heat sensitive."

Of course, if energy costs keep going up, that will change.

Intel is trying to use energy savings to propel its Xeon 5100 and 5300 server processors, the former of which deliver 4.5 times better performance per watt than the single-core processors that Intel was selling at the beginning of 2006 against superior dual-core Opterons--and selling very poorly in many cases. The Xeon 5300s do even better. Despite the fact that Intel can quote lower TDP numbers for its chips--mainly because they do not have memory controllers on chip--AMD's own tests using the new SPEC CPU_2006 benchmark tests show that the standard Rev F parts announced today deliver the same or better performance than similar Xeon 5100 parts from Intel. And comparing the Opteron 8220 against Intel's "Tulsa" Xeon 7140, the Opteron comes out way ahead on performance for many workloads and still does, on average, about 6 percent better on seven standard benchmarks.

It is a dead heat, more or less, at the chip level and, very likely, at the system level, too. Which is why AMD can't charge more money for that extra performance.


RELATED STORIES

AMD: Native Quad Core Opteron Will Best Intel Quasi Quads

Intel Delivers More Quad-Core Server and PC Chips

AMD Creates Two-Socket Athlon FX Variant, Demos Quad-Core Opteron

Intel Delivers Quasi Quad Core Xeon 5300 Server Chips

Intel Previews Quad-Core Chips, Talks Up Massively Cored RISC

AMD Unveils Rev F Opterons, Prepares for Quad Cores in Mid-2007



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
MKS

You're at Bat, and It's Time for a "Change Up".
Change Up to MKS Implementer and MKS Integrity
for Application Lifecycle Management - Move to MKS NOW and SAVE!

Has the recent acquisition of your change management provider thrown you a curve ball?
Is your vendor offering you loosely coupled tools, leaving you with information gaps and a technical headache? Can your current change management solution meet your needs
today - and tomorrow?

This isn't slow pitch.

The world of software development is moving at a rapid pace and you need to be ready to meet new demands. Change management is a vital component of your business -- the foundation for compliance, for modernization, for process control and risk management. You need a vendor that can keep up with these business demands.

A winning team, less risk, more advantages.

Join a team that is reliable, steadfast and dedicated to delivering tangible business results to System i5 customers as well as cross-platform teams. MKS is firmly dedicated to the change management market and has a clear product roadmap. MKS's Implementer for software change management and deployment has a reputation of technical excellence with large and small customers across every industry.

Make the change up - move to MKS NOW and SAVE!

For a limited time MKS will help you make the move with special pricing when you purchase Implementer with MKS Integrity - giving you integrated workflow, complete audit trails and
coverage of the application lifecycle as well as a platform to manage both System i5 and
cross-platform development.

Visit the Products section of the MKS website for more information on
Implementer and MKS Integrity.

Click here to request more information on our time limited "change up" offer.

Download the white paper:
"Managing iSeries Development in the Application Modernization Era."

The time is now to make the switch.

Call MKS today at 1-800-613-7535 to discuss your options, and while you're at it, request a
FREE change management process assessment by our team of experts with over 40 years of experience in the midrange market.

Contact MKS Sales at 1-800-613-7535 or sales@mks.com
For more information, visit www.mks.com/solutions


Editor: Alex Woodie
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

Vision Solutions:  Get facts on managed availability and business continuity to eliminate downtime
Wolf Computer Consulting:  Reliable service and affordable rates for business computing needs
COMMON:  Join us at the Spring 2007 conference, April 29 - May 3, in Anaheim, California

 

The Four Hundred
IBM Upgrades System i5 Disk Controllers, Adds Enclosures

IBM and ISVs Launch VIP Program to Reinvigorate System i5 Sales

Sundry Other System i5 Announcements

The X Factor: One Socket to Rule Them All

The Linux Beacon
PA Semi Samples Homegrown Dual-Core Power Chip

Intel, AMD Push and Pull for X64 Market Share

VMware, XenSource Launch Virtualization Bundles

The X Factor: One Socket to Rule Them All

Four Hundred Stuff
RevSoft Pushes 'Lights On' Approach to Systems Automation

Oracle Cools on Fusion, Focuses on Current ERP

LogLogic Aims to Ease Log Data Crunch

Halcyon Updates Systems Management Tools

Big Iron
Platform Solutions v IBM: Estoppel, Old Show Key

Top Mainframe Stories From Around the Web

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

Four Hundred Guru
Finding the Last Transaction for a Customer

Sorting Arrays and Subfiles with a User Index

When Fix Central Won't Let You Download PTFs

System i PTF Guide
January 27, 2007: Volume 9, Number 4

January 20, 2007: Volume 9, Number 3

January 13, 2007: Volume 9, Number 2

January 6, 2007: Volume 9, Number 1

December 30, 2006: Volume 8, Number 50

December 23, 2006: Volume 8, Number 49

The Unix Guardian
AMD: Native Quad Core Opteron Will Best Intel Quasi Quads

IT Salaries Rise by 5.2 Percent in 2006, Dice Survey Says

IBM Bags System p5 Super Deals, But Is Power6 Slipping?

Ask TPM: The Economics of Open Source Software

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

OpenLogic
MKS
World Data Products
Lakeview Technology
Sweeter Than Me



TABLE OF CONTENTS
Microsoft Hits Snags in Anti-Piracy Net

AMD Delivers Faster and Cooler Rev F Opteron Chips

Microsoft Hypes the NAP, Unveils New Security Appliance

VMware, XenSource Launch Virtualization Bundles

But Wait, There's More:


IBM X-Force Says For-Profit Cyber Attacks to Increase in 2007 . . . Another Zero-Day Vulnerability Hits Office . . . File Format Translator Available for Open XML, ODF . . . Dell Fires CEO Rollins, Founder Takes the Reins Back . . . Intel, AMD Push and Pull for X64 Market Share . . . IBM Replaces Top X64 Server Exec . . .

The Windows Observer

BACK ISSUES





 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement