Intel today launched an Atom system-on-chip (SoC) line that combines extremely low power usage with server-class features, including virtualization technology and Error-Correcting Code (ECC) for higher reliability.
The Intel Atom S1200 chips are for microservers as well as storage and networking systems that need energy efficiency and enterprise features that—Intel says—you just can’t get in ARM chips. Intel called the S1200 “the world’s first 6-watt server-class processor,” and said microservers using the chip will be able to fit 1,000 nodes into a single rack.
ARM may dominate smartphones and tablets, but Intel hopes to lead the way in bringing smartphone CPUs to data centers. (As we’ve previously reported, Intel is making Atom-based SoCs for PCs, phones, and tablets as well.)
“Right now there are no ARM-based enterprise-class servers,” Intel VP Diane Bryant said at a press conference for today’s announcement. In addition to the hardware-assisted virtualization and ECC features already mentioned, Bryant noted that the Intel S1200 chips are 64-bit and support the x86 software prevalent in today’s data centers.
The prospects of ARM servers from AMD and the likes of Calxeda are intriguing, but ARM isn’t a major player in the data center yet. With Atom S1200, Intel hopes to pre-empt ARM’s entry into the server market.
To prove the Atom chips’ usefulness, Intel trotted out partners HP and Microsoft to talk about servers that will use the S1200 SoC and Windows Server’s support for the new product line.
Describing the importance of 64-bit, Microsoft’s Windows Server lead architect Jeffrey Snover said, “the benefits of a large, flat address space are just critical for a server operating system, so much so that Microsoft stopped supporting 32-bit chips [in Windows Server] a couple of releases ago. We’re very excited that we’ll now have a very low-energy part that could run the demands of Server.”

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