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Itanium market failure has nothing to do with Dell
The market did not disappear, it never existed. Dell's decision is a reaction to that fact.

Itanium costs too much, it is too slow and there is no software selection for it. Only by offering reasonable performing x86 emulation and thus offered decent migration path could Intel have succeeded.

Itanium has been dead for a while.
Posted by: balsover   Posted on: 09/16/05 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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Difficult to "shutter" a non-existent Biz...  realitycheck101 | 09/15/05
Intel Executive Mantra...  bidemytime | 09/15/05
If it's not selling  John Zern | 09/15/05
MS and Intel the medocrity of one matches the timidity of the other. (nt)  michael_t | 09/15/05
What?!  GTO_Patrick | 09/16/05
The perfect storm  Roger Ramjet | 09/16/05
Itanium market failure has nothing to do with Dell  balsover | 09/16/05
Could this be the beginning of an AMD revolution?  daver_z | 09/16/05
Probably not  balsover | 09/16/05

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