• It's not all bad news for Intel - AWS just snapped up a load of c

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Tuesday, August 26, 2025 22:45:08
    It's not all bad news for Intel - AWS just snapped up a load of custom Xeon chips for extra cloud power

    Date:
    Tue, 26 Aug 2025 21:31:00 +0000

    Description:
    Intel lands AWS deal for custom Xeon 6 chips, highlighting continuing competition with AMD and ARM in hyperscale cloud infrastructure.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================AWS introduces R8i servers tuned for memory-heavy enterprise cloud workloads Intels custom Xeon chips target databases and massive cloud data tasks Memory bandwidth defines AWSs new Intel-powered servers for demanding applications

    Intel has received some positive news after Amazon Web Services (AWS) confirmed it is rolling out new virtual server options built on custom versions of Intels Xeon 6 processors.

    These new options, known as R8i and R8i-flex, will give AWS customers additional choices when renting computing power through the cloud.

    For Intel, this marks a rare win at a time when rivals such as AMD and ARM-based processors have been capturing more of the market. What R8i and R8i-flex actually bring

    AWS said both R8i and R8i-flex support DDR5 7200MT/s memory and can run up to 3.9 GHz all-core turbo frequency.

    The R8i family spans a wide range, scaling from just two to 384 vCPUs, matching the capability of dual-socket servers powered by Intels 96-core Xeon 6 chips, since AWS defines a vCPU as one thread of a core.

    While AWS has not disclosed further details of what makes these custom Xeons distinct, the focus on memory bandwidth appears to be the defining factor for these deployments.

    AWS is marketing the new instances for memory-heavy use cases, including SQL and NoSQL databases, in-memory caches such as Memcached and Redis, SAP HANA deployments, and data frameworks like Apache Hadoop and Apache Spark.

    Customers are also given the option to adjust how bandwidth is distributed between network functions and Amazons elastic block store connections, which AWS suggests may provide measurable database performance improvements.

    This positioning reflects how cloud hosting and cloud storage increasingly depend on optimized hardware to handle large-scale workloads, particularly those tied to analytics and enterprise resource planning.

    Hyperscale providers such as Oracle have previously promoted unique Xeon configurations with extra cores or slightly faster clock speeds, while AWS itself has highlighted earlier rounds of tailored Intel processors.

    The arrival of these new Xeons, therefore, fits into an established pattern, yet still shows that Intel remains relevant to large-scale providers.

    The memory bandwidth improvements, while not a complete architectural overhaul, are enough for AWS to publicly promote the chips as competitive within its portfolio.

    For Intel, this order signals continued reliance from a crucial customer at a time when alternative architectures such as AMDs Epyc and ARM-based designs are gaining ground.

    For AWS, it broadens the range of performance options available to clients whose workloads demand high memory throughput and stable performance across large clusters.

    In an era where AI tools and data processing shape demand, Intel is not
    losing out completely; it still holds a place in the core of cloud infrastructure. You might also like Here are the best mobile workstations around today Take a look at some of the best external hard drives you can buy now Organizational resilience: We need to think beyond cyber attacks



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/pro/its-not-all-bad-news-for-intel-aws-just-snapped- up-a-load-of-custom-xeon-chips-for-extra-cloud-power


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