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Google Selects 3rd Gen AMD EPYC Processors to Launch First Tau VM Instance

btarunr

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AMD and Google Cloud today announced T2D, the first instance in the new family of Tau Virtual Machines (VMs) powered by 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors. According to Google Cloud, the T2D instance offers 56% higher absolute performance and more than 40% higher price performance for scale-out workloads. The Tau VM family provides customers with a leading combination of performance, price, and easy integration. The T2D instances, using the leadership performance of 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors, excels at workloads including web servers, containerized micro-services, data logging-processing, large scale Java applications and more.

"At Google Cloud, our customers' compute needs are evolving," said Thomas Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud. "By collaborating with AMD, Google Cloud customers can now leverage amazing performance for scale-out applications, with great price-performance, all without compromising x86 compatibility." "We designed 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors to meet the growing demand from cloud and enterprise customers for high-performance, cost-effective solutions with optimal TCO," said AMD President and CEO Dr. Lisa Su. "We work closely with Google Cloud and are proud they selected AMD to exclusively power the new Tau VM T2D instance which provides customers with powerful new options to run their most demanding scale-out workloads."



The industry-leading2 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors allow Google Cloud customers to seamlessly integrate workloads with their existing x86 ecosystems, enabling applications and frameworks to work with the T2D instances. The new instances are offered in eight different predefined VM shapes, with up to 60 vCPUs per VM, and up to 4 GB of memory per vCPU, making this technology ideal for scale-out workloads.

AMD EPYC processors power numerous instances at Google Cloud that support workloads including compute optimized, general purpose, high-performance and confidential computing. These instances are used by well-known cloud-native companies, spanning multiple industries, providing high-performance cloud instances for their workloads.

T2D instances will be available in Q3 and customers can sign up for a preview here.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Seeing the words 'large-scale' and 'Java' in the same sentence makes me shudder.
 
Another "Ouch" for Intel. Google recently announced that they are adopting their own custom processor, and now follow up with another news about switching to AMD. In both cases, Intel continues losing business.
 
Another "Ouch" for Intel. Google recently announced that they are adopting their own custom processor, and now follow up with another news about switching to AMD. In both cases, Intel continues losing business.
Which is good, this time AMD will not get fuck like it was the case with the AMD64 back in the days :)
 
WTF is a Tau?
Good question in this instance.
I know what Intel's TAU stands for, but not when related to an AMD virtual machine
 
Another "Ouch" for Intel. Google recently announced that they are adopting their own custom processor, and now follow up with another news about switching to AMD. In both cases, Intel continues losing business.
Which is good, this time AMD will not get fuck like it was the case with the AMD64 back in the days :)
Yes, AMD is building out the business partnerships that'll only strengthen their overall business for years to come. Lisa's not going to let Intel curb stomp them again this time around.
 
Seeing the words 'large-scale' and 'Java' in the same sentence makes me shudder.
It's not meant for running 100,000 Java applets in 100,000 browsers.
 
AMD: We will give you 40% discount if you use our stuff in a limited rollout project.
AMD:... Pretty please...?
El Goog: Well... Ok, bring your stuff.
AMD: YAY!
 
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