The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Intel rolls out new chips in battle for data centre business

-

NEWYORK:IntelCorpa­nnounced a new line of microproce­ssors for data centres, setting up a battle with Advanced Micro Devices and others for the lucrative business of supplying the chips that power cloud computing.

The new Xeon Scalable Processor chips provide far greater support for next-generation computing applicatio­ns such as artificial intelligen­ce and driverless cars, said Naveen Rao, vice president of Intel’s artificial intelligen­ce products group, in an interview with Reuters.

The chips are aimed at companies including Alphabet’s Google, Microsoft Corp, Amazon.com Inc. and others that operate data centres with thousands of computers, both to power their own services and to provide computing horsepower for customers who don’t want to own and maintain their own computer systems.

Google Cloud Platform was the first data centre to adopt the new Intel processors.

Paul Nash, project manager for Google Compute Engine, called the deal an “expansion and deepening of our partnershi­p” with Intel.

But Intel will face stiff competitio­n from historic rival AMD, which recently launched its own next-generation data centre processor.

The big Internet companies are also doing more of their own hardware design and experiment­ing with chips based on technology from ARM Holdings and others, partly as a way of pushing Intel to keep prices in line.

Martin Reynolds, an analyst at Gartner, said the new Intel processor is a step up from its previous generation with better power efficiency, improvemen­t on artificial intelligen­ce workload and more advanced storage.

Reynolds noted that the biggest risk for Intel may be its dependence on a relatively small number of big data centre operators.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia