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Verizon Selects AMD SeaMicro SM15000 Servers For Its Cloud Services

Sin

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AMD today announced that Verizon is deploying SeaMicro SM15000 servers for its new global cloud platform and cloud-based object storage service, whose public beta was recently announced. AMD's SeaMicro SM15000 server links hundreds of cores together in a single system using a fraction of the power and space of traditional servers. To enable Verizon's next generation solution, technology has been taken one step further: Verizon and AMD co-developed additional hardware and software technology on the SM15000 server that provides unprecedented performance and best-in-class reliability backed by enterprise-level service level agreements (SLAs). The combination of these technologies co-developed by AMD and Verizon ushers in a new era of enterprise-class cloud services by enabling a higher level of control over security and performance SLAs. With this technology underpinning the new Verizon Cloud Compute and Verizon Cloud Storage, enterprise customers can for the first time confidently deploy mission-critical systems in the public cloud.



"We reinvented the public cloud from the ground up to specifically address the needs of our enterprise clients," said John Considine, chief technology officer at Verizon Terremark. "We wanted to give them back control of their infrastructure - providing the speed and flexibility of a generic public cloud with the performance and security they expect from an enterprise-grade cloud. Our collaboration with AMD enabled us to develop revolutionary technology, and it represents the backbone of our future plans."

As part of its joint development, AMD and Verizon co-developed hardware and software to reserve, allocate and guarantee application SLAs. AMD's SeaMicro Freedom fabric-based SM15000 server delivers the industry's first and only programmable server hardware that includes a high bandwidth, low latency programmable interconnect fabric, and programmable data and control plane for both network and storage traffic. Leveraging AMD's programmable server hardware, Verizon developed unique software to guarantee and deliver reliability, unheralded performance guarantees and SLAs for enterprise cloud computing services.

"Verizon has a clear vision for the future of the public cloud services-services that are more flexible, more reliable and guaranteed," said Andrew Feldman, corporate vice president and general manager, Server, AMD. "The technology we developed turns the cloud paradigm upside down by creating a service that an enterprise can configure and control as if the equipment were in its own data center. With this innovation in cloud services, I expect enterprises to migrate their core IT services and mission critical applications to Verizon's cloud services."

"The rapid, reliable and scalable delivery of cloud compute and storage services is the key to competing successfully in any cloud market from infrastructure, to platform, to application; and enterprises are constantly asking for more as they alter their business models to thrive in a mobile and analytic world," said Richard Villars, vice president, Datacenter & Cloud at IDC. "Next generation integrated IT solutions like AMD's SeaMicro SM15000 provide a flexible yet high-performance platform upon which companies like Verizon can use to build the next generation of cloud service offerings."

Innovative Verizon Cloud Capabilities on AMD's SeaMicro SM15000 Server Industry Firsts
Verizon leveraged the SeaMicro SM15000 server's ability to disaggregate server resources to create a cloud optimized for computing and storage services. Verizon and AMD's SeaMicro engineers worked for over two years to create a revolutionary public cloud platform with enterprise class capabilities.

These new capabilities include:
  • Virtual machine server provisioning in seconds, a fraction of the time of a legacy public cloud;
  • Fine-grained server configuration options that match real life requirements, not just small, medium, large sizing, including processor speed (500 MHz to 2,000 MHz) and DRAM (.5 GB increments) options;
  • Shared disks across multiple server instances versus requiring each virtual machine to have its own dedicated drive;
  • Defined storage quality of service by specifying performance up to 5,000 IOPS to meet the demands of the application being deployed, compared to best-effort performance;
  • Consistent network security policies and procedures across the enterprise network and the public cloud;
  • Strict traffic isolation, data encryption, and data inspection with full featured firewalls that achieve Department of Defense and PCI compliance levels;
  • Guaranteed network performance for every virtual machine with reserved network performance up to 500 Mbps compared to no guarantees in many other public clouds.
The public beta for Verizon Cloud will launch in the fourth quarter. Companies interested in becoming a beta customer can sign up through the Verizon Enterprise Solutions website.

AMD's SeaMicro SM15000 Server
AMD's SeaMicro SM15000 system is the highest-density, most energy-efficient server in the market. In 10 rack units, it links 512 compute cores, 160 gigabits of I/O networking, more than five petabytes of storage with a 1.28 terabyte high-performance supercompute fabric, called Freedom Fabric. The SM15000 server eliminates top-of-rack switches, terminal servers, hundreds of cables and thousands of unnecessary components for a more efficient and simple operational environment.

AMD's SeaMicro server product family currently supports the next generation AMD Opteron ("Piledriver") processor, Intel Xeon E3-1260L ("Sandy Bridge") and E3-1265Lv2 ("Ivy Bridge") and Intel Atom N570 processors. The SeaMicro SM15000 server also supports the Freedom Fabric Storage products, enabling a single system to connect with more than five petabytes of storage capacity in two racks. This approach delivers the benefits of expensive and complex solutions such as network attached storage (NAS) and storage area networking (SAN) with the simplicity and low cost of direct attached storage.

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It sounds good. We'll see if Verizon can kill the deal or not.
 
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Hopefully it takes fewer verizon techs to run a server than it does to fix a telephone line. Which at my last count was 6.

5 Fios techs to stop by and twiddle with the box while trying to sell you Fios and finally 1 copper wire tech to find the problem in only 5 mins and have you up and running again within 30.

I wouldn't trust data with Verizon even if they paid me to store it. Worst telco ever.
 
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AMD's SeaMicro server product family currently supports the next generation AMD Opteron ("Piledriver") processor, Intel Xeon E3-1260L ("Sandy Bridge") and E3-1265Lv2 ("Ivy Bridge") and Intel Atom N570 processors.

This says a lot. Judging from this AMD maybe really be up to something there and have some really interesting tech developed. And NOT just something what You'd call "We just optimized our shit a lot and thus we gave it a name and whatnot".
 

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2 should do it!
 
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This is awesome for AMD, this is a big sign after the SeaMicro acquisition. Hopefully these take off and we see AMD's share prices start to rise.
 
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Hopefully it takes fewer verizon techs to run a server than it does to fix a telephone line. Which at my last count was 6.

5 Fios techs to stop by and twiddle with the box while trying to sell you Fios and finally 1 copper wire tech to find the problem in only 5 mins and have you up and running again within 30.

I wouldn't trust data with Verizon even if they paid me to store it. Worst telco ever.

At least they offer a cloud services.Mine here still struggling to get 3G working properly while sitting on 90's logic board on their base transmission station :wtf:
 
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