200 + articles on Microsoft Research Intel Atom Based Servers

I wrote about Intel Atom based servers starting in Aug 2008, and people thought it was silly to think of Intel Atom as a server product.

Well, thanks to Microsoft Research’s Intel Atom project, there are now over 200 articles about the idea of Intel Atom Servers. http://news.google.com/news?pz=1&ned=us&hl=en&q=intel+atom+microsoft+research

Microsoft tests Intel Atom netbook processor for 'green' servers

Computerworld - ‎2 hours ago‎

Judging by the $300 to $400 cost of Atom-based netbooks, Ohara said that racks of Atom-based server blades could be made for even less. "Intel hates this ...

Microsoft experiments with servers based on Intel Atom processors FierceCIO

all 4 news articles »

Boston Globe

Microsoft TechFest: A pinch of your fingers and images, videos move

Seattle Times - ‎Feb 25, 2009‎

... data center built from 100 of the low-power Intel Atom processors used in cheap netbook computers. Hrvoje Benko, of Microsoft's advanced research group, ...

Microsoft builds atomic cloud ComputerWeekly.com

Microsoft plays with small, sleepy servers Register

Microsoft debuts cloud R&D team EETimes.com

GigaOm  - Enews 2.0

all 200 news articles »

DigitalJournal.com

Microsoft studies new ways to turn servers on and off

DigitalJournal.com - ‎Feb 25, 2009‎

With Project Marlowe, Microsoft is looking at trade-offs between using a large amount of Intel Atom chips compared to using Intel Xeon chips. The Intel Atom ...

Microsoft powers data centres with netbooks Inquirer

all 3 news articles »

New York Times Blogs

Microsoft Studies the Big Sleep

New York Times Blogs - ‎Feb 24, 2009‎

With Marlowe, Microsoft has created a prototype server that relies on Intel’s Atom chip, most often found today in ultra-portable computing devices like ...

And, thanks to Eric Lai from ComputerWorld  I am in one of the articles as well. ;-)

Because they were designed for laptops and netbooks, Atom CPUs can be quickly put into sleep/hibernate states and then quickly woken up, said Dave Ohara, a consultant who runs the Green Data Center blog,unlike desktop and server CPUs.

The next step is a big name Server OEM shipping an Intel Atom server.  Here is a scary # for Intel quoted in the NYtimes.

With Marlowe, Microsoft has created a prototype server that relies on Intel’s Atom chip, most often found today in ultra-portable computing devices like netbooks. Such chips consume about one-tenth as much power as a regular Xeon server chip from Intel, and computer boards based on the chip cost about $70 instead of $1,000. The Atom chips, however, can perform only about one-fourth the amount of work in a given period of time as the Xeon chips, said Navendu Jain, a Microsoft researcher, during an interview Tuesday at the company’s headquarters.