Made in New Zealand: Kauricone's tiny servers find niches and channels
The days when local PC and server assemblers competed strongly with the large multinationals are gone. But innovative products can still succeed.
The days when local PC and server assemblers competed strongly with the large multinationals are gone. But innovative products can still succeed.
Microsoft has decided that those users who want to run 64-bit apps on a Windows on ARM PC must use Windows 11, not Windows 10.
SoftBank Group Corp has agreed to sell chip designer Arm to Nvidia Corp for as much as US$40 billion in a deal set to reshape the semiconductor landscape.
Rival semiconductor giants ARM and Intel have agreed to work together to manage networks of connected devices from both firms.
Data center computers with Intel’s newer chips might reboot more often than normal due to problems with Spectre and Meltdown patches.
Filling a gap in their offerings, NVIDIA hopes to gain money and market share with Arm's extensive reach.
Intel's US$740 million investment in software company Cloudera will help sell more x86 chips in Hadoop installations, but it could also be a defensive move to maintain its server lead from the emerging threat posed by 64-bit ARM servers.