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07 April 2010 ,
Written by Dhruv Tanwar
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Microsoft made the announcement about ceasing support for Itanium on its Windows Server blog, where it said that support for Windows Server 2008 R2 would cease on July 9, 2013 and extended support would come to an end five years later.
Microsoft said the natural evolution of the x86 64-bit architecture was reason for change as it led to the creation of processors and servers that deliver the necessary scalability and reliability needed for today’s “mission-critical” workloads. Earlier this week, Intel and arch rival AMD released new high core-count processors, and servers with eight or more x64 processors have also been announced by a almost a dozen server manufacturers. Microsoft said these servers contain 64 to 96 processor cores, with more on the horizon.
Last year, Red Hat had also announced that it would cease Itanium support as dwindling usage no longer justifed continued development. |