I think if you have a job that can be solved by an FPGA + Xeon, there is 
probably a way to do it FPGA only. More importantly, they don't discuss the 
other 6 or 7 variables taken into consideration with the architecture decisions 
in a Datacenter. Certainly ARMv8 will be way cheaper, non? Facebook is a big 
company and there is no way they would sign on to this. What percentage of a 
Big Customer's processing is even floating point? I have to figure not much... 
now that is how you make a case against ARMv8... :)

________________________________
From: Federico Lucifredi [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2014 1:55 PM
To: Kurt L Keville; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [HH] Hubris Springs Eternal

Looks more like adefensive move against ARM.  For big (BIIIG) customers like 
Microsoft, Google, or a financial shop, that kind of manic optimization may 
make sense (and those same customers would have the pull and money to order a 
custom SoC with an ARM core if they wanted).

Cute technically... but unless you are one of the few budding skynets, 
designing the FPGA is the costly hurdle. And if you do a sloppy job, what kind 
of optimization is it? ;-)

Best -F

On 06/26/2014 06:45 PM, Kurt L Keville wrote:
Just so I'm clear here... Intel wants us to give up searching for a solution to 
our DataCenter problems and come back to the farm... and all it will cost us is 
an FPGA... if I wanted to program FPGAs, I don't need a Xeon to go along with 
it!

http://gigaom.com/2014/06/18/intel-will-offer-a-customizable-chip-to-keep-data-center-clients-happy/



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(Federico L. Lucifredi) - flucifredi at acm.org - GnuPG 0x4A73884C
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