Monday, March 26, 2012

Itanium vs Itanium 2

The 64 bit SQL Server version product blurb on the net specificaly reference
s the Itanium 2 processor. Are there any limitations to the original Itanium
? Obviously the Itanium servers are much cheaper to come by.
ThanksI agree with Joe. Don't buy a McKinley, make sure you get a Madison as they
are about twice as fast.
Andrew J. Kelly
SQL Server MVP
"joe chang" <anonymous@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:2efa01c3e219$0ac15cd0$a301280a@.phx.gbl...[QUOTE]
> i would not waste time on the original itanium system no
> matter how cheap they are on ebay, unless you want a space
> heater
> i would not expect any better performance than a Pentium
> III Xeon 700MHz
>
> specificaly references the Itanium 2 processor. Are there
> any limitations to the original Itanium? Obviously the
> Itanium servers are much cheaper to come by.|||I had a discussion on that when I was @.IT FORUM.
Ofcourse 64 bit will perform better I fully agree, but most of the time
people just forget to optimize their databases, actually no one looks at how
their queries perform, how they can be optimized, especially when using some
customized ERP or CRM applications that used to have their own storage
engine and now support sql server as the backend storage
Regards,
Dandy Weyn
MCSE, MCSA, MCDBA, MCT
www.dandyman.net
"Andrew J. Kelly" <sqlmvpnooospam@.shadhawk.com> wrote in message
news:%23zm%23QJj4DHA.2656@.tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
quote:

> I agree with Joe. Don't buy a McKinley, make sure you get a Madison as

they
quote:

> are about twice as fast.
> --
> Andrew J. Kelly
> SQL Server MVP
>
> "joe chang" <anonymous@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:2efa01c3e219$0ac15cd0$a301280a@.phx.gbl...
>

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