AWS announces new ARM-based instances with Graviton2 processors

Subscribers:
4,200
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_7mDvbI6r8



Duration: 2:23
521 views
1


Reported today on TechCrunch

For the full article visit: https://techcrunch.com/2019/12/03/aws-announces-new-arm-based-instances-with-graviton2-processors/

AWS announces new ARM-based instances with Graviton2 processors

AWS, the cloud division of Amazon, just announced the next generation of its ARM processors, the Graviton2. This is a custom chip design with a 7nm architecture. It is based on 64-bit ARM Neoverse cores.

Compared to first-generation Graviton processors (A1), today's new chips should deliver up to 7x the performance of A1 instances in some cases. Floating point performance is now twice as fast. There are additional memory channels and cache speed memory access should be much faser.

The company is working on three types of Graviton2 EC2 instances that should be available soon. Instances with a "g" suffix are powered by Graviton2 chips. If they have a "d" suffix, it also means that they have NVMe local storage.

There will be :

General purpose instances (M6g and M6gd)

Compute-optimized instances (C6g and C6gd)

Memory-optimized instances (R6g and R6gd)

You can choose instances with up to 64 vCPUs, 512 GiB of memory and 25 Gbps networking.

And you can see that ARM-powered servers are not just a fad. AWS already promises a 40% better price/performance ratio with ARM-based instances when you compare them with x86-based instances.

AWS has been working with operating system vendors and independent software vendors to help them release software that runs on ARM. ARM-based EC2 instances support Amazon Linux 2, Ubuntu, Red Hat, SUSE, Fedora, Debian and FreeBSD. It also works with multiple container services (Docker, Amazon ECS, and Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service).




Other Videos By Colin Boyd SEO


2019-12-03New Star Wars game show that sounds like American Ninja Warrior coming to Disney+
2019-12-03Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 865 flagship is here — without integrated 5G
2019-12-03Wyze debuts smart deadbolt lock and wireless keypad
2019-12-03Congress is split over your right to sue Facebook
2019-12-03Genius sues Google over allegedly stolen song lyrics
2019-12-03We analyzed Pablo Escobar’s brother’s folding phone promo video
2019-12-03YouTube claims its crackdown on borderline content is actually working
2019-12-03Google Photos launches private messaging for quickly sharing photos
2019-12-03The best Cyber Monday deals that you can still find
2019-12-03Mesmerizing graph shows uncomfortably close encounters between space junk
2019-12-03AWS announces new ARM-based instances with Graviton2 processors
2019-12-03Come to Disrupt Berlin if you care about fintech
2019-12-03Non-obvious fundraising tips from a Silicon Valley outsider
2019-12-03AWS launches its custom Inferentia inferencing chips
2019-12-03Orbion partners with U.S. Department of Defence on small satellite propulsion tech
2019-12-03Watch Amazon’s AWS re:Invent conference live right here
2019-12-03Danish bank staff banned from buying Bitcoin with their own money — urged to dump holdings
2019-12-03TikTok owns up to censoring some users' videos to stop bullying
2019-12-03Remember how simple consoles used to be with this original PlayStation teardown
2019-12-03Ethereum developer Virgil Griffith accused of helping North Korea evade sanctions
2019-12-03Last chance to apply to the Hackathon at Disrupt Berlin