Last month Facebook's vice president of
technical operations Jonathan Heiliger blasted Intel and AMD, saying
their latest generation of Opteron and Xeon server parts was pants, and
that it wasn't worth the trouble. He said the chips were simply not
delivering significant performance increases, and were about as
economical and power efficient as 19th century steam boats.
AMD didn't take kindly to Heilieger's rant about AMD, Intel and the
OEMs behind the server market, and it has responded to the allegations.
In a blog post, AMD CMO Nigel Dessau said that the companies latest
quad-core and six-core Opterons are some of the most power efficient
server CPUs on the market, and he is rigth. Some of them even fit the
40W TDP envelope, which is almost notebook TDP turf.
As for Facebook's complaints about lackluster performance, Dessau
pointed out that Facebook elies heavilyon PHP and Java instead of
C++, and that synthetic benchmarks simply can't cover every usage
scenario and eventuality.
"Let’s
face it: synthetic benchmarks are essentially a useful evil," said Dessau. "Everyone
wants to know how a certain technology performs against a standardized
test, but what happens when that test bares no real resemblance to the
real work people do? You get a huge disconnect."
You can find the blog entry
here.