As the chip market moves from making denser, hotter processors to combining multiple cores, Azul Systems has announced plans to leapfrog its competitors by releasing a 48-core chip by 2007.The company, based in Mountain View, Calif., already sells a 24-core chip called Vega 1. Its Vega 2 processor will be a 64-bit, 90-nanometer processor designed by Azul and fabricated by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing.Chip manufacturers such as Intel and Advanced Micro Devices are following a similar path as they pursue their technology roadmaps toward upgrading their current crop of dual-core chips to quad-core processors by 2007. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe The difference is that Vega chips are designed to power large data centers, packaged as 16-chip rack-mounted systems manufactured by Azul. Azul’s customers are Fortune 1000 companies that need on-demand service for transaction-intensive tasks such as online commerce. A closer competitor is Sun Microsystems. In fact, Azul sued Sun in March to defend against a threatened trademark infringement suit. Azul systems rely on Sun’s Java or Microsoft’s .Net platforms to tie together their pools of computing resources.The move from 24 to 48 cores per chip will help grow those pools so large that companies can share the excess capacity, instead of stocking up on extra computers of their own. “Many data centers buy computing like it’s beer; they run out to get another six-pack every week. They may buy 10 extra systems as an insurance policy so they can handle a jump in capacity; that’s a huge waste,” said Shahin Khan, Azul’s vice president and chief marketing officer.In contrast, Azul treats processing and memory as a shared network service, called “network attached processing” (NAP).“It is similar to network attached storage, which took the disk out of the server and put it on the network. NAP does the same thing with CPUs and memory,” Khan said.One customer will be BT PLC of London. On April 3, the company announced it would use Azul hardware to provide telecommunications and broadband Internet service. With 20 million business and residential customers in the United Kingdom, BT needs a flexible computing center capable of scaling up and down as its customers require their on-demand services.Another Azul customer is Pegasus Solutions of Dallas. The company manages online hotel reservations, at a pace of 100,000 transactions per month. It will use collections of Vega chips to handle wide swings in traffic, since people who book their own trips are less predictable than travel agents.For its next act, Azul plans to keep expanding its multi-core model. The Vega 1 chip is built on 130-nanometer technology, while Vega 2 uses 90 nanometers. Azul engineers are already making plans to shrink the die size to 65 and 45 nanometers, Khan said. -Ben Ames, IDG News ServiceFor related news coverage, read Chip Makers TSMC and UMC See Big Jump in Q1 Sales and Qualcomm Sampling 65-Nanometer 3G Chips from TSMC.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content news CIO Announces the CIO 100 UK and shares Industry Recognition Awards in flagship evening celebrations By Romy Tuin Sep 28, 2023 4 mins CIO 100 IDG Events Events feature 12 ‘best practices’ IT should avoid at all costs From telling everyone they’re your customer to establishing SLAs, to stamping out ‘shadow IT,’ these ‘industry best practices’ are sure to sink your chances of IT success. By Bob Lewis Sep 28, 2023 9 mins CIO IT Strategy Careers interview Qualcomm’s Cisco Sanchez on structuring IT for business growth The SVP and CIO takes a business model first approach to establishing an IT strategy capable of fueling Qualcomm’s ambitious growth agenda. By Dan Roberts Sep 28, 2023 13 mins IT Strategy IT Leadership feature Gen AI success starts with an effective pilot strategy To harness the promise of generative AI, IT leaders must develop processes for identifying use cases, educate employees, and get the tech (safely) into their hands. By Bob Violino Sep 27, 2023 10 mins Generative AI Innovation Emerging Technology Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe