Introduction
After labouring with practically no presence in the x86 server market for a long time, AMD has built momentum through the release of Zen-based Epyc processors starting with first-generation Naples in 2017.
AMD took advantage of Intel roadmap slips by releasing second-generation Rome in 2019, which is particularly notable for doubling the core-and-thread count and quadrupling the L3 cache in one generation and on the same underlying platform.
The capability of AMD s server hardware has since convinced the leading server vendors - Dell, HPE, Lenovo, et al - to take Epyc seriously, and each has product lines for a broad range of use-cases.
AMD Raises Bar Against Intel With 3rd-Gen EPYC Milan CPUS
The new server processors come with big price-performance and total cost of ownership benefits over Intel’s Xeon Scalable chips, according to AMD. ‘Third-gen EPYC is the highest-performance server processor in the industry, at the socket level and at the per-core level when you look at every core-count boundary,’ an exec says. By Dylan Martin March 15, 2021, 11:00 AM EDT
AMD said it’s raising the bar for performance and price against Intel while introducing new security features in the data center with the launch of its third-generation EPYC processors, which represent the company’s broadest lineup yet for cloud, enterprise and high-performance computing workloads.
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