Hard to believe it was six years ago today that the AMD Opteron came out. I remember fondly how excited we were to get our first Opteron. AMD was going to seriously turn the tables on their competitor and really shake up the enthusiast world, and we were all on edge for it.
We owe a lot to the little 64-bit chip that could. Our community was extremely excited. Former Icrontic writer SimGuy was all over the web, trawling for news. There was, on the old Icrontic, a gigantic thread about the “Sledgehammer” that went on for page after page, compiling rumors, trading speculation, and being excited about the potential.
Try to remember the scene in 2003: 64 bit computing was a mythical beast on the horizon, for the most part in the “perpetually 5 years away” department. Even by early 2004, nobody really knew what to expect. We compiled a bunch of information on 64 bit to try to demystify it a bit, but people were just starting to get an idea of what could be done. Even though AMD had beaten Intel to the 1ghz race back in 2000, Intel was still the completely dominant force in the corporate and server space. With Opteron, the underdog finally had a chance to make it where it counts—the datacenter and corporate office. Speculation was high that Opteron could be the weapon to turn the tide.
History has shown that they did make it happen. Because of the Opteron, major OEMs such as Dell started selling servers with chips other than Intel in them. Competition is a beautiful thing, and so we say Happy Birthday, Opteron!
Here’s a bit of Icrontic trivia for you; the Opteron was the reason that I met Thrax for the very first time. He wanted so desperately to see one in real life that he risked bringing his young 16 year old self over to some creepy internet guy’s office on the east side of Detroit. Now he’s one of my very good friends. Thanks AMD!

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