They should check the security pillar. I think it's made of jello.
I liked that...
Funny...
Apropos!
Yes. It is and can be a good one depending on use cases. It can EASILY blow the monetary savings of the cpu (core vs core and thread vs thread) right out the door. Over buying on cores and threads in a DC environment can be quite detrimental to the bottom line on many fronts.
*cough* For every piece of software that charges
by the core for using it, there are at least four competing pieces of software that charge according to
other metrics--like, uh, perceived
quality and professional reputation, for instance, or, uh
compatibility with varying software standards, or even, in some cases,
security. Or some combination thereof! Unless the software is in the "my business cannot survive without this software" category, my sincere recommendation is to eschew these "licensed by the x86 core" applications as if they are spreading plague...
Intel are scrambling. Worse position they've been in since Athlon 64, maybe even worse as this time they're helmed by a band-aid choice of a CEO, Bob Swan. A man that has no understanding of the main products Intel develops vs a MIT powerhouse who studied electrical engineering for her PhD.
Bingo! So much of a company's fate is inextricably applied to the man at the top--After the highpoint of A64, @ AMD, the point at which the company should have taken off like a bat out of hell, putting the wrong person at the top of the stack in the CEO position came darn close to killing the company off, instead--which would have been a tragedy--would have set general computing back maybe 50 years. It didn't happen, thankfully---investors largely kept the clock ticking at AMD until the right CEO could be landed, and
she had one foot in engineering and one foot in the consumer markets and she understood AMD's situation perfectly! Lisa Su was ideal on so many levels it defies description. The right ma--er, lady, for the job! In spades! Lots of CEO candidates might have identified AMD's problems correctly but few of them would have
known how to solve them! But
CEO mismanagement is the #1 cause of computer companies expiring--a la Commodore--just one example--Cyrix, and many more. I mean, for years at AMD the company had a CEO so utterly clueless about "What to do?--where to go?" that at one point
AMD was actually selling Intel servers under the AMD brand! *talk about face palm* I thought at the time it was finally curtains for AMD as selling servers for Intel had to be the bottom--but Lisa Su came on deck, ready to knock the ball out of the park, little did I know....
AMD simply doesn't have the money to toss away like Intel has and wastes, but the interesting thing is that Intel's mistakes today are going to begin exacting penalties that have far greater short-term and long term effects on Intel--and it's all because of the fact that AMD is making Intel appear to be the quite second-rate tech company. It's AMD executing on a dime these days--certainly not Intel. ATM Intel has a huge cash warchest to sit on, but the flip side is that a company the size of Intel can burn through money like there's no tomorrow, so sitting pat on past performance to continue to bring in
something isn't going to work all that much longer! Either Intel will make the products people want--or it won't--and there's no gray area left. It's a very binary proposition.