AMD is not tied to a specific architecture by marriage.
At Wells Fargo, AMD CTO Mark Papermaster touched on the unusual topic of reviewing the company’s past decisions when the host asked him about the prospects for the company’s x86-compatible processors to compete with solutions based on the Arm architecture.
Image Source: AMD
An AMD representative saw fit to recall that in the past decade, the company not only offered Seattle server processors with Arm-compatible cores, but also was going to develop its own Arm-compatible K12 architecture. The company was forced to abandon these plans, according to Papermaster, due to a not too developed server ecosystem. Now, according to him, the Arm architecture in this regard has seriously advanced in terms of market distribution.
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AMD’s own x86-compatible server processors are now quite competitive in terms of total cost of ownership, but if any of the large customers want to use Arm-compatible solutions in their systems, then the AMD core division is ready to satisfy their wishes. As the technical director of the company figuratively put it, AMD is not bound by marriage with any particular processor architecture. It is a priority for her to offer customers the most suitable solutions for them.