iTWire Wednesday, 26 May 2021 01:45 Oracle Cloud now provides Arm CPUs at one cent per core hour Featured
Oracle today announced a new range of Arm compute instances based on Ampere’s ARM processors along with the tools and support to accelerate Arm-based application development. The new Arm offerings clock in at a single cent per core hour, the industry’s lowest cost per core.
The x86 processor market largely warded off competition from SPARC, MIPS, PowerPC and Titanium options from the 1980s through the early 2000s, becoming the dominant CPU format. Today it’s a different story, with x86, GPUs and ARM.
SHARE
Oracle Corp. is giving customers more choice and flexibility with the launch of its first Arm-based cloud compute offering on the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure platform.
The new offering, called OCI Ampere A1 Compute, is designed to power both general-purpose and cloud-native workloads that demand high performance at more manageable costs, Oracle said today. It’s based on the Ampere Altra architecture built by Ampere Computing LLC.
Today’s announcement comes as Oracle makes a big investment into the Arm ecosystem more generally, with the availability of more resources and tools, including a new development environment for developers that’s intended to support Arm-based application development.
Press release content from Business Wire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
Armory Expands Relationship with AWS, Joins AWS ISV Workload Migration Program
May 11, 2021 GMT
SAN MATEO, Calif. (BUSINESS WIRE) May 11, 2021
Armory, an open source continuous delivery software company for enterprises at scale, expanded its collaboration with Amazon Web Services (AWS) by qualifying for the AWS ISV Workload Migration Program (WMP).
This program helps customers migrate independent software vendor (ISV) workloads to AWS via a repeatable migration process. Customers can more easily migrate and manage workloads with Armory on AWS.
ADVERTISEMENT
“With a prescriptive migration approach, customers are able to mitigate financial risks while accelerating execution of migrations to AWS,” said Daniel R. Odio, CEO and co-founder of Armory. “Working with AWS brings significant value to customers, helping them deliver better software that is brought to market faster.”