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AMD Unveils Professional Design Support Services
At LinuxWorld, AMD introduced its Professional Design Support Services
program, available through the AMD Boston Design Center. Created to help speed
a customer's design and time-to-market, the Professional Design Support
Services program supports development of AMD64 processor-based products, from
embedded systems and client products to high-end High Performance Computing
(HPC) servers.
Customers who take advantage of the subscription-based services can receive
assistance from some of AMD's top engineering talent while having access to
certain reference designs, Web-based issue trackers and step-by-step support
in their creative process as they develop products based on AMD64 technology
with Direct Connect Architecture.
"This is a natural extension of our customer-centric philosophy," said Marty
Seyer, corporate vice president and general manager of the Microprocessor
Business Unit, Computation Products Group at AMD. "Sharing what we have
learned about the design of AMD64 technology-based systems and enabling any
sized company, from the smallest start-up to the largest OEM, to profit from
our expertise is proof of the passion we have for our customers' success."
"The Boston Design Center's expertise was critical to reducing our development
time and speeding the CRAY XD1 system to market," said Paul Terry, chief
technical officer at CRAY. "HyperTransport technology plays a vital role in
the Cray XD1 direct connected processor architecture. Having some of the
original developers of HyperTransport technology involved in the design
process from the beginning saved us a great deal of time."
AMD64 technology with Direct Connect Architecture is uniquely suited to enable
a wide range of distinctive design points for customers. Technology companies
can choose to create unique multi-processing boards based on the scalability
and leading-edge performance of the AMD Opteron processor. Many companies are
choosing to take advantage of the unique I/O and unprecedented bus speeds of
HyperTransport technology, while others are focusing on eliminating bridge
bottlenecks and reducing system costs. As co-developers of HyperTransport
technology, the engineers at the Boston Design Center are especially qualified
to help lead innovative companies to market with compelling new products.
"By leveraging AMD's Professional Design Support Services, we were able to
design and deliver a rugged, high-performance, quad-processor solution for our
real-time cluster computing system in record time," said Ralph Barrera,
distributed computing product manager at Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded
Computing. "AMD went above and beyond in providing us the tools and the
technical support during our product design and integration phases."
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