AMD and Google Cloud announced the new T2D instances, the first of a new family of virtual machines for the Google Compute Platform called Tau VMs. The T2Ds are powered exclusively by 3rd Gen AMD Epyc processors and take advantage of the high performance “Zen 3” core.
Instances offer 56% more absolute performance and a 42% increase per ratio price-performance compared to VMs from any major public cloud vendor. T2D instances are designed for complex business applications such as web servers, containerized microservices, data logging-processing, large-scale Java applications, and more.
The Tau VM family offers customers a leading combination of performance, price and easy integration. T2D instances, using the leadership performance of 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors, excel in workloads including web servers, containerized microservices, data processing, large scale Java applications and more.
« Our customers' computing needs are evolving, ”said Thomas Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud. «By partnering with AMD, Google Cloud customers can now take advantage of amazing performance for scale-out applications, with an excellent price-performance ratio, all without compromising x86 compatibility».
«We designed AMD processors Third-generation EPYC to meet the growing demand from cloud and enterprise customers for high-performance, cost-effective solutions with optimal TCO, "said AMD President and CEO Dr. Lisa Su.
" We work closely with Google Cloud and we are proud that they have chosen AMD to exclusively power the new Tau VM T2D instance, which offers customers powerful new options to run their most demanding scale-out workloads ».
3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors promise Google Cloud customers to seamlessly integrate workloads with their existing x86 ecosystems, letting applications and frameworks work with T2D instances.
The new instances are offered in eight different predefined VM forms, with up to 60 vCPUs per VM and up to 4GB of memory per vCPU, making this technology ideal for scale-out workloads.
Processors AMD EPYC power numerous instances on Google Cloud, including compute optimized, general purpose, high-performance, and confidential computing. These instances are used by cloud-native companies spanning multiple industries, providing high-performance cloud instances for their workloads.
Instances offer 56% more absolute performance and a 42% increase per ratio price-performance compared to VMs from any major public cloud vendor. T2D instances are designed for complex business applications such as web servers, containerized microservices, data logging-processing, large-scale Java applications, and more.
The Tau VM family offers customers a leading combination of performance, price and easy integration. T2D instances, using the leadership performance of 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors, excel in workloads including web servers, containerized microservices, data processing, large scale Java applications and more.
« Our customers' computing needs are evolving, ”said Thomas Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud. «By partnering with AMD, Google Cloud customers can now take advantage of amazing performance for scale-out applications, with an excellent price-performance ratio, all without compromising x86 compatibility».
«We designed AMD processors Third-generation EPYC to meet the growing demand from cloud and enterprise customers for high-performance, cost-effective solutions with optimal TCO, "said AMD President and CEO Dr. Lisa Su.
" We work closely with Google Cloud and we are proud that they have chosen AMD to exclusively power the new Tau VM T2D instance, which offers customers powerful new options to run their most demanding scale-out workloads ».
3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors promise Google Cloud customers to seamlessly integrate workloads with their existing x86 ecosystems, letting applications and frameworks work with T2D instances.
The new instances are offered in eight different predefined VM forms, with up to 60 vCPUs per VM and up to 4GB of memory per vCPU, making this technology ideal for scale-out workloads.
Processors AMD EPYC power numerous instances on Google Cloud, including compute optimized, general purpose, high-performance, and confidential computing. These instances are used by cloud-native companies spanning multiple industries, providing high-performance cloud instances for their workloads.