Christine McMonigal, Intel, at Intel Developer Forum 2014 with Stu Miniman
@theCUBE
#IDF14
With up to 18 cores and an array of data-driven software capabilities, the Xeon E5-2600 v3 marks one of the biggest leaps in Intel Corp.’s flagship server processor series yet. The new iteration raises the competitive bar beyond merely keeping up with Moore’s Law to addressing specific workload requirements down at the component level.
The E5-2600 v3, which made its debut at the Intel Developer Forum, comes in 26 separate models designed to address an especially broad spectrum of use cases ranging from office computing to distribute data crunching. Added to the list are another 20 custom-ordered configurations that Intel claims to have already started shipping to select customers, whom it didn’t name but presumably include many familiar names from the hyperscale market, which has a known appetite for what Wikibon terms hyper-specialized hardware.
The new family represents Intel’s most serious attempt thus far at bringing some of that optimization down into the traditional enterprise data center. The most expensive E5-2600 v3 chips can support up to 70 percent more virtual machines than their predecessors, according to the company, which can add up to a lot of saved licensing costs in large organizations. Since hypervisor vendors such as VMware Inc. charge per core, the the denser the infrastructure, the less money a customer has to pay for software.
To top it off, the E5-2600 v3 introduces a built-in voltage regulator that allows each individual processor in a chip to set its own power level depending on the load, a feature that can also produce significant cost savings in large-scale environments. The family further cuts electricity consumption through the use of DDR4 memory, which succeeds the DDR3 architecture used in the previous generation series and provides increased data reliability with 35 percent greater efficiency.
The fourth-generation specification can also handle considerably more bandwidth, an improvement that Intel is exploiting with a new control that supports 10 Gigabit Ethernet and – continuing the power optimized theme – uses half the energy of its predecessor. Yet while the increased efficiency is a tremendous advantage in and of itself, Intel says that customers will not only be paying less for software licenses and electricity with the E5-2600 v3 but also get more back.
Every chip in the family comes fitted with thermal sensors for monitoring airflow and outlet temperature, a potentially powerful maintenance tool in the hands of operations professionals, and a brand new supporting chipset that can support three USB 3.0, eight USB 2.0 and 10 SATA3 slots. Also included in the package is compatibility with the NVMe protocol for connecting direct-attached flash cards.
Overall, the E5-2600 v3 performs up to three time faster than the previous generation Xeon series and can handle six times as much throughput at half the latency. Combined with the value-added capabilities Intel has baked into the series, that makes for a powerful value proposition that puts the chipmaker in a that much better position to extend its dominance into the software-defined data center.
Forgot Password
Almost there!
We just sent you a verification email. Please verify your account to gain access to
Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco. If you don’t think you received an email check your
spam folder.
Sign in to Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco.
In order to sign in, enter the email address you used to registered for the event. Once completed, you will receive an email with a verification link. Open this link to automatically sign into the site.
Register For Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco
Please fill out the information below. You will recieve an email with a verification link confirming your registration. Click the link to automatically sign into the site.
You’re almost there!
We just sent you a verification email. Please click the verification button in the email. Once your email address is verified, you will have full access to all event content for Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco.
I want my badge and interests to be visible to all attendees.
Checking this box will display your presense on the attendees list, view your profile and allow other attendees to contact you via 1-1 chat. Read the Privacy Policy. At any time, you can choose to disable this preference.
Select your Interests!
add
Upload your photo
Uploading..
OR
Connect via Twitter
Connect via Linkedin
EDIT PASSWORD
Share
Forgot Password
Almost there!
We just sent you a verification email. Please verify your account to gain access to
Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco. If you don’t think you received an email check your
spam folder.
Sign in to Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco.
In order to sign in, enter the email address you used to registered for the event. Once completed, you will receive an email with a verification link. Open this link to automatically sign into the site.
Sign in to gain access to Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco
Please sign in with LinkedIn to continue to Intel Developer Forum 2014 | San Francisco. Signing in with LinkedIn ensures a professional environment.
Are you sure you want to remove access rights for this user?
Details
Manage Access
email address
Community Invitation
Christine McMonigal - Intel Developer Forum 2014 - theCUBE
Christine McMonigal, Intel, at Intel Developer Forum 2014 with Stu Miniman
@theCUBE
#IDF14
With up to 18 cores and an array of data-driven software capabilities, the Xeon E5-2600 v3 marks one of the biggest leaps in Intel Corp.’s flagship server processor series yet. The new iteration raises the competitive bar beyond merely keeping up with Moore’s Law to addressing specific workload requirements down at the component level.
The E5-2600 v3, which made its debut at the Intel Developer Forum, comes in 26 separate models designed to address an especially broad spectrum of use cases ranging from office computing to distribute data crunching. Added to the list are another 20 custom-ordered configurations that Intel claims to have already started shipping to select customers, whom it didn’t name but presumably include many familiar names from the hyperscale market, which has a known appetite for what Wikibon terms hyper-specialized hardware.
The new family represents Intel’s most serious attempt thus far at bringing some of that optimization down into the traditional enterprise data center. The most expensive E5-2600 v3 chips can support up to 70 percent more virtual machines than their predecessors, according to the company, which can add up to a lot of saved licensing costs in large organizations. Since hypervisor vendors such as VMware Inc. charge per core, the the denser the infrastructure, the less money a customer has to pay for software.
To top it off, the E5-2600 v3 introduces a built-in voltage regulator that allows each individual processor in a chip to set its own power level depending on the load, a feature that can also produce significant cost savings in large-scale environments. The family further cuts electricity consumption through the use of DDR4 memory, which succeeds the DDR3 architecture used in the previous generation series and provides increased data reliability with 35 percent greater efficiency.
The fourth-generation specification can also handle considerably more bandwidth, an improvement that Intel is exploiting with a new control that supports 10 Gigabit Ethernet and – continuing the power optimized theme – uses half the energy of its predecessor. Yet while the increased efficiency is a tremendous advantage in and of itself, Intel says that customers will not only be paying less for software licenses and electricity with the E5-2600 v3 but also get more back.
Every chip in the family comes fitted with thermal sensors for monitoring airflow and outlet temperature, a potentially powerful maintenance tool in the hands of operations professionals, and a brand new supporting chipset that can support three USB 3.0, eight USB 2.0 and 10 SATA3 slots. Also included in the package is compatibility with the NVMe protocol for connecting direct-attached flash cards.
Overall, the E5-2600 v3 performs up to three time faster than the previous generation Xeon series and can handle six times as much throughput at half the latency. Combined with the value-added capabilities Intel has baked into the series, that makes for a powerful value proposition that puts the chipmaker in a that much better position to extend its dominance into the software-defined data center.