Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 4th Dec 2006 19:43 UTC, submitted by ahmetaa
Hardware, Embedded Systems Azul unwrapped its newest chip the 48-core Vega2 today. It is the successor to last year's Vega1. This Java processor triples performance from the year-old part and has an attractive feature set. Let's start out with the systems. Azul does not sell chips, only complete machines. There is a two-chip, 96 core, 48GB model 3210 and a four-chip, 96-192GB model 3220. Both are 5U machines, with the 3210 pulling about 580W max and the 3220 pulling about 1000W. There will be eight and 16 socket machines coming in 2007.
Order by: Score:
Dumb question
by SaidinUnleashed on Mon 4th Dec 2006 21:03 UTC
SaidinUnleashed
Member since:
2006-08-21

What would one use a system like this for?

Reply Score: 1

RE: Dumb question
by ormandj on Mon 4th Dec 2006 21:08 UTC in reply to "Dumb question"
ormandj Member since:
2005-10-09

Enterprise Java applications. Any Java application requiring high amounts of concurrent processing (highly-threaded.) Etc.

Reply Score: 4

RE: Dumb question
by ahmetaa on Mon 4th Dec 2006 21:14 UTC in reply to "Dumb question"
ahmetaa Member since:
2005-07-06

Any non trivial high load server application. Banks, ebay type web sites, Hospitals, Governmental institutions, Army, Data centers, Airports etc. One drawback is (i think), this is only for hosting the application. for other stuff (like storage, non-java applications) you probably need separate systems.

Reply Score: 1

RE[2]: Dumb question
by Matt Giacomini on Mon 4th Dec 2006 21:21 UTC in reply to "RE: Dumb question"
Matt Giacomini Member since:
2005-07-06

I guess some would see that as a drawback. On the other hand I think a lot of people prefer appliance computing to only focus one strength and be able to be dropped into your network as an isolated component.

My only comment on that would be how much integration work does it take to get one of these things up and going. Does anyone have an experience with one of these?

Also wasn't there a lawsuit between Sun and these guys? I don't remember hearing that it was resolved.

Reply Score: 1

RE[3]: Dumb question
by ahmetaa on Mon 4th Dec 2006 21:27 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Dumb question"
ahmetaa Member since:
2005-07-06

i think lawsuit is still unresolved. bad thing is, this systems are too high level it is hard to find "real" reviews. But i think it is fairly ok to assume it is not so hard to integrate those systems since they claim to work with almost all App servers and having a partnership with BEA.

Reply Score: 1

...
by Tuishimi on Tue 5th Dec 2006 07:26 UTC
Tuishimi
Member since:
2005-07-06

Who wants to buy me one for Christmas! ;)

Reply Score: 3

My favorite part...
by BrianH on Tue 5th Dec 2006 16:48 UTC
BrianH
Member since:
2005-07-06

My favorite part of the article is this:

"The ISA for the Vega2 cores does not directly map to Java, but they map pretty well to the concepts in VM based languages."

Anyone for a Mono port? How about LLVM, Parrot, Neko, ...

Reply Score: 1

RE: My favorite part...
by ahmetaa on Tue 5th Dec 2006 17:27 UTC in reply to "My favorite part..."
ahmetaa Member since:
2005-07-06

nobody uses mono in servers.

Reply Score: 1

RE[2]: My favorite part...
by BrianH on Tue 5th Dec 2006 17:36 UTC in reply to "RE: My favorite part..."
BrianH Member since:
2005-07-06

People use .NET on servers, but I don't have the source to that VM. Porting Mono is a good workaround for that.

Reply Score: 1

Price?
by alopecoid on Wed 6th Dec 2006 01:47 UTC
alopecoid
Member since:
2005-07-07

Anyone see a price on these systems?

Yes, I'm actually serious.

Thanks.

Reply Score: 1

RE: Price?
by JonasDue on Wed 6th Dec 2006 09:42 UTC in reply to "Price?"
JonasDue Member since:
2005-09-17

From the article:

"...The Azul box starts at $49,995 for a 2-way and probably around $500K for the 16-way, so it is notably cheaper than the Fujitsu machine."

Reply Score: 1