It already is. My company runs hundreds (possibly thousands) of ARM64-based instances right now. It’s done great things for our cloud spend. We still have more x86 stuff than ARM because some applications just don’t perform as well on ARM, but I can imagine that ratio will change as software gets more optimized (specifically the JDK, golang’s compiler, and GCC/LLVM) and Ampere releases new systems with better single thread perf.
EDIT: Ampere, not Alterra. God damn tech company names.
That’s actually good news. Honestly, I’m hoping alternative archs would be in the game as well, but their options tend to be less accessible/affordable than the x86 counterpart.
There are ARM CPUs for servers and cloud computing. Of course X86 CPUs are far more common, at least for now.
Wake me up when ARM64 based cloud gets mainstream.
It already is. My company runs hundreds (possibly thousands) of ARM64-based instances right now. It’s done great things for our cloud spend. We still have more x86 stuff than ARM because some applications just don’t perform as well on ARM, but I can imagine that ratio will change as software gets more optimized (specifically the JDK, golang’s compiler, and GCC/LLVM) and Ampere releases new systems with better single thread perf.
EDIT: Ampere, not Alterra. God damn tech company names.
That’s actually good news. Honestly, I’m hoping alternative archs would be in the game as well, but their options tend to be less accessible/affordable than the x86 counterpart.