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posted by requerdanos on Sunday September 05 2021, @11:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the virtually-indestructible dept.

A brief overview of IBM's new 7 nm Telum mainframe CPU:

From the perspective of a traditional x86 computing enthusiast—or professional—mainframes are strange, archaic beasts. They're physically enormous, power-hungry, and expensive by comparison to more traditional data-center gear, generally offering less compute per rack at a higher cost.

This raises the question, "Why keep using mainframes, then?" Once you hand-wave the cynical answers that boil down to "because that's how we've always done it," the practical answers largely come down to reliability and consistency. As AnandTech's Ian Cutress points out in a speculative piece focused on the Telum's redesigned cache, "downtime of these [IBM Z] systems is measured in milliseconds per year." (If true, that's at least seven nines.)

IBM's own announcement of the Telum hints at just how different mainframe and commodity computing's priorities are. It casually describes Telum's memory interface as "capable of tolerating complete channel or DIMM failures, and designed to transparently recover data without impact to response time."

When you pull a DIMM from a live, running x86 server, that server does not "transparently recover data"—it simply crashes.

Telum is designed to be something of a one-chip-to-rule-them-all for mainframes, replacing a much more heterogeneous setup in earlier IBM mainframes.


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  • (Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Tuesday September 07 2021, @07:28AM

    by maxwell demon (1608) on Tuesday September 07 2021, @07:28AM (#1175248) Journal

    A business that lets kids play with the main servers deserves to fail anyway.

    Next in: All the bridges are not reliable because they don't withstand a meteor impact.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
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