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Leading Software Vendors Endorse AMD64 Multi-Core Technology
AMD announced software support from Novell, Red Hat and Sun for AMD64
multi-core technology and recommended ISVs license software applications by
socket. This follows a recent demonstration of the industry's first x86
dual-core processor last week at AMD's Austin facilities where four x86-based
dual-core AMD Opteron processors powered an HP ProLiant DL585 server.
The upcoming dual-core AMD64 processors are designed to run with current
versions of Linux, Solaris and Windows as well as existing x86- and
AMD64-based applications without requiring any software modifications. This
follows the AMD customer-centric approach of safeguarding software investments
while delivering industry-leading processor innovation.
"AMD continues to innovate within the industry standard, putting the power of
choice in the hands of the customer," said Marty Seyer, corporate vice
president and general manager of the Microprocessor Business Unit in the AMD
Computation Products Group. "Just like AMD's AMD64 innovation that offers the
least disruptive path to 64-bit computing, we are continuing this approach
with multi-core technology that is designed to minimize the impact to our
hardware and software partners. AMD's customer-centric approach will enable
the hundreds of ISVs who are part of the AMD64 ecosystem to take advantage of
the performance benefits of dual-core processors without writing additional
code."
Based on feedback from customers and partners, AMD is providing
industry-thought leadership by recommending software developers consider
licensing their software by socket and schedule threads by available cores.
This recommendation mirrors the software-licensing model that the industry has
established for simultaneous multi-threaded (SMT) processors and will allow
existing x86 software to run on dual-core processors without having to make
changes.
Industry analysts agree. "Gartner recommends that users attempt to negotiate
software licenses counting a single-chip device as one processor, no matter
how many cores it carries," said Martin Reynolds, fellow at Gartner Inc.
Dual-core AMD Opteron processors are scheduled to be available in mid-2005.
Servers and workstations based on dual-core AMD Opteron processors are
expected to more efficiently support the demands of multi-threaded
applications. When AMD dual-core processors become available for client
platforms, expected in the second half of 2005, multi-threaded operating
systems such as Linux, Solaris and Windows will be able to more efficiently
handle the simultaneous administration of single-threaded applications
typically found in notebook and desktop computing environments.
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