Arm is making headway in its quest to conquer the server market

Microsoft Azure becomes first major cloud vendor to embrace Arm certifications

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Armhas announced a set of milestones that set the stage for a further push into theserverCPU market.

The company this week revealed thatMicrosoftAzure servers andvirtual machinespowered by Arm-based Ampereprocessorsnow adhere to SystemReady standards.

Effectively, this means software also designed to the same specification is guaranteed to function as intended in Arm-based Azurecloudenvironments, an important consideration for development teams.

Arm takes on the server market

Arm takes on the server market

Traditionally, Arm-based processors have been found predominantly insmartphonesand IoT endpoints, because of the strong power consumption to performance ratio they deliver. Meanwhile, the server andworkstationmarket has been dominated byIntel’s x86 architecture.

However, Arm has recently begun to muscle its way into the datacenter with its Neoverse platform, which now underpins a host of performance-centric chips.

Cloud vendors like AWS and Alibaba have also discovered the performance advantages of developing their own custom ARM-based silicon, instead of leaning solely on Intel Xeon andAMDEPYC CPUs, based on x86. There isevidence to suggestcompanies like Microsoft and Meta will soon follow suit.

The latest data from Omdia shows Arm-based CPUs are currently found in roughly 5% of servers, but the company expects to make significant headway in the coming years as heavy investment begins to bear fruit.

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Arm launches new cores to cement its IoT dominance>Here’s how Nvidia might respond if its Arm acquisition falls through>A new Arm-based CPU with 128 cores will send shivers down spines at Intel

Speaking toTechRadar Proat MWC 2022 earlier this year, the company’s SVP Infrastructure Chris Bergey explained why the company is so well-positioned to accelerate into the server space.

“With Arm, cloud providers are finding they can get more compute, because they can put more cores in a power envelope. And we’re just at the tip of the iceberg,” he told us.

“This is a ‘show me’ kind of market. If you’ve got the performance and value proposition, companies are highly incentivized to consider alternatives - and the market share will take care of itself.”

One of the few remaining stumbling blocks for Arm is software support, a problem that SystemReady standards are designed to resolve.

With Microsoft becoming the first major cloud vendor to embrace the new set of certifications, first introduced back in 2020, Arm will hope the rest will now fall in line.

ViaThe Register

Joel Khalili is the News and Features Editor at TechRadar Pro, covering cybersecurity, data privacy, cloud, AI, blockchain, internet infrastructure, 5G, data storage and computing. He’s responsible for curating our news content, as well as commissioning and producing features on the technologies that are transforming the way the world does business.

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