Originally posted by next9
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SPARC, IA64 Ports Of Ubuntu Face Decommissioning
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Originally posted by next9 View PostNo. IA-64 has some interesting features x86 lacks. For example core-level lockstep is some kind of "raid" for processor core. It allows computational redundancy on hardware level, thus different cores can do the same task and verify the result or solve the computational failure... and not only among the cores of the same CPU, but also among the different sockets.
It is true Itanium can not beat Xeons and Opterons in price/performance comparison. But the task of these CPU is different - to be rockstable for applications, where it is necessary and crucial.
SPARC has similar functionality in the LEON hardened implementation that can even error correct flipped register bits for operation in high radiation environments.
I wish there were a 200$ LEON board out there with a decent speed chip it seems most of them are around 200Mhz when they claim as much as 1.5Ghz is possible with the current design. A 1.5Ghz leon would save the 32bit SPARC Linux port... and 64bit is an offshoot/refinement of that.
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Originally posted by movieman View PostI'm not so sure: Ubuntu isn't really a player in the 'serious' server market which might have SPARC or IA64 CPUs instead of x86... I have it on my MYthTV/NFS server box at home but it changes too much too fast for me to risk it on a server that does real work.
Canonical needs to change his way of making the distro if he wants a server ready OS. Not only making ubuntu more stable, but also removing some useless heavy toy which is only usable by end-users.
Not so funny, because you completely missed the point. The biggest advantage of Itanium VLIW architecture is not performance, but reliability. While typical uptime of x86 machine can be 99,999% of year, IA-64 machines have 99,99999%, which means minutes vs. seconds of downtime. This makes Itanium perfect choice for solutions, where reliability demand is no 1 like HP-UX servers.
Yes, it is not for your home computer. But who cares.... :P
For today, is totally plausible to make a x86 server, and that's extremely cheap in comparison to an IA-64 or SPARC server. Yeah, you may have less reliability, but since a small company doesn't have the responsability google has, who cares?
And one more thing. What do you think about clustering and loading balance? Two pcs are faster than one, and the probability for two pcs being down at the same time are 99,999% of the 99,999% :P
IMHO thats why google chooses an horde of home x86 computers instead of those expensive IA-64 servers.
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