Wednesday, November 10th 2021
IBM Cloud Selects 3rd Gen AMD EPYC Processors for New Bare Metal Offering for Compute-Intensive Workloads
AMD announced today that IBM Cloud has chosen 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors to expand its bare metal service offerings designed to power customers' demanding workloads and solutions. The new servers, featuring 128 cores, up to 4 TB of memory and 10 NVMe drives per server, give users full access to high-end, dual-socket performance with AMD EPYC 7763 processors; a first for IBM Cloud in a dual-socket platform.
"Our customers have a high demand for computing processing power and the new 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors provide the high levels of performance and scalability we were looking for," said Suresh Gopalakrishnan, vice president, IBM Cloud. "Our collaboration with AMD has helped us deliver our highest core counts and bandwidth ever available for IBM Cloud customers, to offer top market performance for today and tomorrow's demanding workloads."
"IBM Cloud customers regularly running compute-intensive workloads can see an immediate benefit to speed and scalability by upgrading to 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors, while helping to deliver a secure experience for end-users," said Lynn Comp, corporate vice president, Cloud Business Group, AMD. "Our continued collaboration with IBM Cloud is further validation of the strong standing AMD holds in the market as we deliver topline solutions that promote a seamless experience for cloud partners and their customers."
The combination of IBM Cloud Bare Metal Servers with the AMD EPYC 7763 processor is designed for customers seeking a diverse set of workloads including, compute-intensive workloads, virtualized environments, large-scale databases, and more. In addition, the bare metal servers are ideal for hosting massive multiplayer online (MMO) gaming environments. Hosting companies can achieve the low latency, high-performance processing and memory and generous bandwidth necessary for a reliable, responsive platform.
The AMD EPYC 7763 dual-socket bare metal server offering at IBM Cloud includes:
"Our customers have a high demand for computing processing power and the new 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors provide the high levels of performance and scalability we were looking for," said Suresh Gopalakrishnan, vice president, IBM Cloud. "Our collaboration with AMD has helped us deliver our highest core counts and bandwidth ever available for IBM Cloud customers, to offer top market performance for today and tomorrow's demanding workloads."
"IBM Cloud customers regularly running compute-intensive workloads can see an immediate benefit to speed and scalability by upgrading to 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors, while helping to deliver a secure experience for end-users," said Lynn Comp, corporate vice president, Cloud Business Group, AMD. "Our continued collaboration with IBM Cloud is further validation of the strong standing AMD holds in the market as we deliver topline solutions that promote a seamless experience for cloud partners and their customers."
The combination of IBM Cloud Bare Metal Servers with the AMD EPYC 7763 processor is designed for customers seeking a diverse set of workloads including, compute-intensive workloads, virtualized environments, large-scale databases, and more. In addition, the bare metal servers are ideal for hosting massive multiplayer online (MMO) gaming environments. Hosting companies can achieve the low latency, high-performance processing and memory and generous bandwidth necessary for a reliable, responsive platform.
The AMD EPYC 7763 dual-socket bare metal server offering at IBM Cloud includes:
- 128 CPU cores per server
- Maximum boosts up to 3.5 GHz (base 2.45 GHz)1
- Support for eight memory channels per socket with up to 4 TB RAM
- Maximum 20 TB of bandwidth
- Advanced memory encryption enabling a secure boot process
- Supports two 10 GbE NICs
18 Comments on IBM Cloud Selects 3rd Gen AMD EPYC Processors for New Bare Metal Offering for Compute-Intensive Workloads
"Intel selects AMD's Milan X for it's latest servers......"
oops ... and that's what is exceptionally worth of mention ... plus a selection from IBM is not a small feat, well ... i think ...
(now that remind me what i saw this evening ... i can find a R7 5800X for a 12600F price aka sub 200chf ... at one of my retailer ... DAMN why Intel did not launch Adler Lake when i got my R5 3600 a month or so ago, :ohwell: i did not pay for it ... but it was priced at 199chf in listings, oh and a R9 5900X for ~320chf not a big drop like the 5800X but still interesting offer, that's just 50chf more than what a 5600X did cost yesterday and that was my next upgrade later :laugh: )
In some years from this point on AMD will only grow. Half of the price, double the performance compared to Intel.
Yeah that's per month.. want another 256 GB of memory, hey, we'll only charge you $500 more per month
www.tomshardware.com/news/microsoft-posts-in-depth-amd-epyc-milan-x-benchmarks So I guess Microsoft and IBM don't know what they're doing with using Milan-X for their cloud services? Or Facebook either? Or the currently being built world's most powerful supercomputers? I mean, being deployed in the most powerful supercomputers in the world, especially those owned by governments definitely doesn't speak to the reliability does it?