Microsoft Developing Own ARM-Based Server Chips

Microsoft is reportedly designed its own ARM-based processors for use in its Azure servers, in a move that could trouble Intel.

Sources told Bloomberg News that the new chips will not only be used in future servers, but also possible Surface devices, but it is not clear at this stage whether that will translate into a final product.

This is not the first time that this rumour has Surfaced (ahem). In March 2017, Bloomberg reported that Redmond would use ARM-based chips in the servers that run its Azure cloud service, after Microsoft had developed a version of Windows 10 that ran on ARM-based processors.

ARM move?

But that 2017 report did not materialise and Redmond still currently uses Intel-based processors for the majority of its Azure cloud services.

In addition, most of its Surface lineup run on Intel chips as well. That said, Microsoft has worked with AMD and Qualcomm for custom chips for its Surface Laptop 3 and Surface Pro X devices.

“Because silicon is a foundational building block for technology, we’re continuing to invest in our own capabilities in areas like design, manufacturing and tools, while also fostering and strengthening partnerships with a wide range of chip providers,” Microsoft spokesman Frank Shaw told Bloomberg.

It also reported that Redmond has increased the hiring of processor engineers in recent years, and has been targetting recruitment in the backyard of chipmakers such as Intel, AMD, Nvidia and others made redundant when Qualcomm abandoned its server chip efforts.

“The incredible demand for computing fueled by new workloads like AI is driving more silicon experimentation in the cloud. Building on decades of x86 ecosystem innovation, we are committed to providing customers the world’s best CPUs and new products from GPUs to AI chips,” Intel was quoted as saying in a statement. “In this expanding market, we expect to gain share in many areas like AI training, 5G networks, graphics and autonomous driving.”

It seems that customers such as Microsoft are increasingly turned to alternative solutions to make sense of the mountain of data that cloud computing and smartphones generate, and the emergence of AI.

If Microsoft does opt for ARM-based processors it will mirror the path already followed Apple.

It should be remembered that Microsoft does currently uses ARM-based chips from Qualcomm in some of its Surface PCs.

Tom Jowitt

Tom Jowitt is a leading British tech freelancer and long standing contributor to Silicon UK. He is also a bit of a Lord of the Rings nut...

Recent Posts

Anthropic Did Not Violate Authors’ Copyright, Judge Rules

Judge rules claim by authors that Anthropic had used their books to train Claude chatbot,…

9 hours ago

OpenAI Removes Mention Of Jony Ive Partnership After Trademark Dispute

Trademark dispute sees OpenAI removing mention of AI deal with legendary Apple designer Sir Jony…

12 hours ago

Waymo Partners Uber To Launch Atlanta Robotaxi Service

Ride-hailing service from Uber and Waymo launched in Atlanta, as Alphabet unit increases robotaxi expansion…

12 hours ago

UK May Compel Google To Change Search Rankings, Offer Alternatives

Competition regulator lays out roadmap to make search engine market “more open, competitive and innovative”

17 hours ago

Amazon Launches Second Batch Of Project Kuiper Satellites

Second batch of Kuiper internet satellites launched from Florida, as Amazon builds rival to Elon…

18 hours ago