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Ampere Computing Publishes Guide For Steam Play Games On Their AArch64 Server CPUs

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  • JoeSpeed
    replied
    Originally posted by ldesnogu View Post
    There are workstations but they are expensive: https://store.avantek.co.uk/ampere-a...tation-ad.html
    Would $1500 mATX with 64 core + heat sink be better? https://www.newegg.com/p/N82E16813140134

    Leave a comment:


  • JoeSpeed
    replied
    Originally posted by SteamPunker View Post
    Could this be a sign that Ampere may be preparing to release a more affordable workstation project, or perhaps an ATX motherboard with a price that would make it more accessible to a wider audience?
    Would you settle for microATX? "This is the Arm Motherboard you want!"

    Leave a comment:


  • marlock
    replied
    Originally posted by grung View Post
    It is a common practice in enterprise software. For example you are not allowed to publish benchmarks of most of the commercial databases like Oracle or DB2.
    I won't go into details but one of those commercial DBs has horrible performance for geodatabases compared with a third opensource database, so basically that example proves the point that "no benchmarking means it ought to be slow"

    Originally posted by grung View Post
    On other hand I'm not sure I would like to know a person or company which runs their production software with translation layer.

    It would be impossible to debug - I has a pleasure to run terraform on Rosetta. It was not nice!

    I will also not go into much detail, but there's a big software company I know that ships Wine as a wrapper so their windows server-side software can run under linux servers... in production, in plain site for their clients... and surprisingly this actually works fine most often than not.

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  • SteamPunker
    replied
    Could this be a sign that Ampere may be preparing to release a more affordable workstation project, or perhaps an ATX motherboard with a price that would make it more accessible to a wider audience?

    Leave a comment:


  • Ladis
    replied
    Originally posted by tildearrow View Post

    No benchmarking means it ought to be slow.
    Apple's Rosetta 2 is also kind of slow, 2/3 of the native performance. But the CPU has a huge raw power, so compared to the previous Intel CPUs, it's on par when running legacy x86 code, sometimes even faster. Don't forget I compare to the Intels in the previous Macs - Intel (and AMD) at the time of the release of M1 and later ones are much better then the old Intels.

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  • ldesnogu
    replied
    Originally posted by jacob View Post
    Is there any actual desktop hardware with these CPUs that someone may want to play on?
    There are workstations but they are expensive: https://store.avantek.co.uk/ampere-a...tation-ad.html

    Leave a comment:


  • Flex
    replied
    Didn't expect to see this headline. I'm guessing this is aimed at the cloud gaming market?

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  • stormcrow
    replied
    Originally posted by jacob View Post
    Is there any actual desktop hardware with these CPUs that someone may want to play on?
    Yes. But they come with Windows for those customers that are developing for "cloud native" applications (for their server class systems) who still have to exist in a Windows dominated (mostly Active Directory dominated) corporate environment. Very niche... although I can imagine Microsoft wanting to buy these things so they can finally build and roll out decent Windows for Arm products... while simultaneously hobbling all of them with either ad injection or requiring "cloud services" that aren't usable when they or the local ISPs screw the pooch. Been happening a lot lately, Office 365 services outages I mean.

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  • jacob
    replied
    Is there any actual desktop hardware with these CPUs that someone may want to play on?

    Leave a comment:


  • dylanmtaylor
    replied
    I'd love to get my hands on one of those ampere dev kits to play around with

    Leave a comment:

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