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by mikewang
2215 days ago
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I tried to google it. And two passages. The common point is "high-efficiency, built-in virtualization solution, as well as its ability to support massive enterprise-class workloads without requiring the type of massive infrastructure that you would need to do the same using x86 chips" Power supports virtualization from chip level which looks excellent. But heard little that company would like to transfer to power from x86. |
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