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Saturday, April 23rd, 2016

    Time Event
    12:20a
    China Server Deal Gives AMD Stock Biggest Surge in 35 Years

    With global PC shipments steadily declining and its behemoth of a rival Intel controlling virtually the entire data center market, the last several years have been tough on AMD, which has struggled to win back share of the x86 server market, make meaningful inroads in the nascent ARM server market, or grow its share of the GPU market, where its chief competitor Nvidia rakes in about 80 percent of all revenue.

    Related: Intel: World Will Switch to “Scale” Data Centers by 2025

    Against this bleak backdrop, the injection of optimism from Thursday’s announcement of a big server technology licensing deal with a Chinese government-backed company sent the Sunnyvale, California-based chipmaker’s stock up more than it has risen in the past 35 years, according to Bloomberg. Its shares saw a 52-percent spike, reaching $3.99 at market close Friday, the biggest increase since 1980.

    AMD CEO Lisa Su said on the company’s earnings call Thursday that AMD expects higher demand for its graphics processors and custom chips. The company forecasts its second-quarter revenue will be 15 percent higher than first-quarter revenue, which was $832 million – down nearly 20 percent year over year.

    Its licensing deal is with Tianjin Haiguang Advanced Technology Investment, a joint venture between AMD and the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The JV will design server chips based on AMD’s intellectual property for the Chinese market only.

    China is the world’s biggest processor market, according to Bloomberg, but foreign companies have to partner with Chinese entities to do business there. Intel also recently entered into a server-focused joint venture with Chinese partners, while Qualcomm, the biggest player in the mobile chip market, has a JV with the Guizhou Province, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    9:30p
    Top 5 Data Center Stories, Week of April 22nd

    For your weekend reading, we present a recap of five noteworthy stories that appeared on Data Center Knowledge this past week.

    Microsoft Moves Away from Data Center Containers – Google has taken the container route for building out data center capacity in the past but eventually decided against it. Now, Microsoft has also found that containers just aren’t the best way for it to scale.

    Coca-Cola Selling Atlanta Data Center as it Shifts Apps to Cloud – Coca-Cola is one of the big corporations shrinking the amount of data center capacity they operate on their own by moving more and more applications to cloud service providers.

    Data Center Chief Dean Nelson Leaves eBay – Nelson has been the face of data center innovation at eBay during his time there. On his watch, the company deployed in production some of the more unusual critical infrastructure ideas, such as containerized, or modular data centers, ultra-high-density power and cooling infrastructure, and fuel cells.

    Data Center Guru Mark Thiele Makes a Switch, Joins Cloud StartupThiele has been a prolific blogger and conference speaker on all things related to data centers and IT infrastructure. In the past, he has led data center strategy at VMware and overseen global IT infrastructure at Brocade.

    Intel: World Will Switch to “Scale” Data Centers by 2025 – Between 70 and 80 percent of systems going into data centers ten years from now will be what the processor giant calls “scale computing” systems.

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