• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

IBM Reveals Next-Generation IBM POWER10 Processor

August 17, 2020 By admin Leave a Comment

New CPU co-optimized for Red Hat OpenShift for enterprise hybrid cloud

IBM (NYSE: IBM) today revealed the next generation of its IBM POWER central processing unit (CPU) family: IBM POWER10. Designed to offer a platform to meet the unique needs of enterprise hybrid cloud computing, the IBM POWER10 processor uses a design focused on energy efficiency and performance in a 7nm form factor with an expected improvement of up to 3x greater processor energy efficiency, workload capacity, and container density than the IBM POWER9 processor.1

Designed over five years with hundreds of new and pending patents, the IBM POWER10 processor is an important evolution in IBM’s roadmap for POWER. Systems taking advantage of IBM POWER10 are expected to be available in the second half of 2021. Some of the new processor innovations include:

IBM’s First Commercialized 7nm Processor that is expected to deliver up to a 3x improvement in capacity and processor energy efficiency within the same power envelope as IBM POWER9, allowing for greater performance.1
Support for Multi-Petabyte Memory Clusters with a breakthrough new technology called Memory Inception, designed to improve cloud capacity and economics for memory-intensive workloads from ISVs like SAP, the SAS Institute, and others as well as large-model AI inference.
New Hardware-Enabled Security Capabilities including transparent memory encryption designed to support end-to-end security. The IBM POWER10 processor is engineered to achieve significantly faster encryption performance with quadruple the number of AES encryption engines per core compared to IBM POWER9 for today’s most demanding standards and anticipated future cryptographic standards like quantum-safe cryptography and fully homomorphic encryption. It also brings new enhancements to container security.
New Processor Core Architectures in the IBM POWER10 processor with an embedded Matrix Math Accelerator which is extrapolated to provide 10x, 15x and 20x faster AI inference for FP32, BFloat16 and INT8 calculations per socket respectively than the IBM POWER9 processor to infuse AI into business applications and drive greater insights.
“Enterprise-grade hybrid clouds require a robust on-premises and off-site architecture inclusive of hardware and co-optimized software,” said Stephen Leonard, GM of IBM Cognitive Systems. “With IBM POWER10 we’ve designed the premier processor for enterprise hybrid cloud, delivering the performance and security that clients expect from IBM. With our stated goal of making Red Hat OpenShift the default choice for hybrid cloud, IBM POWER10 brings hardware-based capacity and security enhancements for containers to the IT infrastructure level.”

IBM POWER10 7nm Form Factor Delivers Energy Efficiency and Capacity Gains

IBM POWER10 is IBM’s first commercialized processor built using 7nm process technology. IBM Research has been partnering with Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. on research and development for more than a decade, including demonstration of the semiconductor industry’s first 7nm test chips through IBM’s Research Alliance.

With this updated technology and a focus on designing for performance and efficiency, IBM POWER10 is expected to deliver up to a 3x gain in processor energy efficiency per socket, increasing workload capacity in the same power envelope as IBM POWER9. This anticipated improvement in capacity is designed to allow IBM POWER10-based systems to support up to 3x increases in users, workloads and OpenShift container density for hybrid cloud workloads as compared to IBM POWER9-based systems. 1

This can affect multiple datacenter attributes to drive greater efficiency and reduce costs, such as space and energy use, while also allowing hybrid cloud users to achieve more work in a smaller footprint.

Hardware Enhancements to Further Secure the Hybrid Cloud

IBM POWER10 offers hardware memory encryption for end-to-end security and faster cryptography performance thanks to additional AES encryption engines for both today’s leading encryption standards as well as anticipated future encryption protocols like quantum-safe cryptography and fully homomorphic encryption.

Further, to address new security considerations associated with the higher density of containers, IBM POWER10 is designed to deliver new hardware-enforced container protection and isolation capabilities co-developed with the IBM POWER10 firmware. If a container were to be compromised, the POWER10 processor is designed to be able to prevent other containers in the same Virtual Machine (VM) from being affected by the same intrusion.

Cyberattacks are continuing to evolve, and newly discovered vulnerabilities can cause disruptions as organizations wait for fixes. To better enable clients to proactively defend against certain new application vulnerabilities in real-time, IBM POWER10 is designed to give users dynamic execution register control, meaning users could design applications that are more resistant to attacks with minimal performance loss.

Multi-Petabyte Size Memory Clustering Gives Flexibility for Multiple Hybrid Deployments

IBM POWER has long been a leader in supporting a wide range of flexible deployments for hybrid cloud and on-premises workloads through a combination of hardware and software capabilities. The IBM POWER10 processor is designed to elevate this with the ability to pool or cluster physical memory across IBM POWER10-based systems, once available, in a variety of configurations. In a breakthrough new technology called Memory Inception, the IBM POWER10 processor is designed to allow any of the IBM POWER10 processor-based systems in a cluster to access and share each other’s memory, creating multi-Petabyte sized memory clusters.

For both cloud users and providers, Memory Inception offers the potential to drive cost and energy savings, as cloud providers can offer more capability using fewer servers, while cloud users can lease fewer resources to meet their IT needs.

Infusing AI into the Enterprise Hybrid Cloud to Drive Deeper Insights

As AI continues to be more and more embedded into business applications in transactional and analytical workflows, AI inferencing is becoming central to enterprise applications. The IBM POWER10 processor is designed to enhance in-core AI inferencing capability without requiring additional specialized hardware.

With an embedded Matrix Math Accelerator, the IBM POWER10 processor is expected to achieve 10x, 15x, and 20x faster AI inference for FP32, BFloat16 and INT8 calculations respectively to improve performance for enterprise AI inference workloads as compared to IBM POWER9,2 helping enterprises take the AI models they trained and put them to work in the field. With IBM’s broad portfolio of AI software, IBM POWER10 is expected to help infuse AI workloads into typical enterprise applications to glean more impactful insights from data.

Building the Enterprise Hybrid Cloud of the Future

With hardware co-optimized for Red Hat OpenShift, IBM POWER10-based servers will deliver the future of the hybrid cloud when they become available in the second half of 2021. Samsung Electronics will manufacture the IBM POWER10 processor, combining Samsung’s industry-leading semiconductor manufacturing technology with IBM’s CPU designs.

Read more about how IBM POWER10 is expected to impact the enterprise hybrid cloud market, here: https://newsroom.ibm.com/Stephen-Leonard-POWER10.

1 3X performance is based upon pre-silicon engineering analysis of Integer, Enterprise and Floating Point environments on a POWER10 dual socket server offering with 2×30-core modules vs POWER9 dual socket server offering with 2×12-core modules; both modules have the same energy level.

2 10-20X AI inferencing improvement is based upon pre-silicon engineering analysis of various workloads (Linpack. Resnet-50 FP32, Resnet-50 BFloat16, and Resnet-50 INT8) on a POWER10 dual socket server offering with 2×30-core modules vs POWER9 dual socket server offering with 2×12-core modules.

SOURCE IBM
www.ibm.com

Filed Under: Tech

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • The 6G Race Is a Standards War, and China Intends to Win It
  • How the US-China Technology War Reshaped the Global Supply Chain
  • Cloudflare’s Agents Week: What It Means for the Developer Ecosystem
  • Critical Loop Raises $26M Series A to Slash Grid Interconnection Delays from Years to Days
  • Arduino Ecosystem — Where Ideas Start Small and Scale Into Systems
  • How to Actually Use a Raspberry Pi Without Overthinking It
  • Chapter’s $100 Million Bet on AI for Retirement
  • Galaxy A57 5G vs A37 5G Review: Samsung Pushes “Everyday AI” Further Down the Stack
  • Samsung Galaxy A37 5G Review: The Sensible Choice
  • Samsung Galaxy A57 5G Review: The Mid-Range Bar Gets Higher

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
The End of Manual Audits: Why AI-Native Accounting Is Not Optional Anymore
Raspberry Pi’s Earnings Beat Signals a Shift From Hobbyist Hardware to Embedded Infrastructure
Betting the Backbone: A Multi-Year Positioning on AMD, Broadcom, and Nvidia
Nvidia’s Groq 3 LPX: The $20B Bet That Could Define the Inference Era
Why Arm’s New AI Chip Changes the Rules of the Game
A Map Without Hormuz: Rewiring Global Oil Flows Through Fragmented Corridors
RoboForce’s $52 Million Raise Signals That Physical AI Is Moving From Demo Stage to Industrial Scale
The Hormuz Crisis: Winners and Losers in the Global Energy Shock
Zohran Mamdani’s Politics of Confiscation
Beyond Shipyards: Stephen Carmel’s Maritime Warning and the Hard Reality of Rebuilding an Oceanic System
The Security Blind Spot Inside the Arduino-Powered IoT Boom
Altum Strategy Group: Cybersecurity in 2026 Is No Longer a Technology Problem
Trent AI and the Security Layer the Agentic Stack Has Been Missing
Gartner Security & Risk Management Summit, June 1–3, 2026, National Harbor, MD
Ashdod Port Has Blocked 134,000 Cyberattacks—and Kept Israel’s Trade Moving
Black Hat Asia 2026, April 23–24, Singapore
World Backup Day 2026: Why Recovery Has Become the Real Test of Cyber Resilience
Cyberhaven Launches Agentic AI Security as Shadow Agents Move Onto the Enterprise Endpoint
Palo Alto Networks Rewrites Security for the Agentic AI Era
RSAC Conference 2026, March 23–26, San Francisco

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
Canva Acquires Simtheory and Ortto to Build End-to-End Work Platform
Netflix Price Hikes, The Economics of Dominance in a Saturated Streaming Market
America’s Brands Keep Winning Even as America Itself Slips
Kioxia’s Storage Gambit: Flash Steps Into the AI Memory Hierarchy
Mamdani Strangling New York
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Apple TV Arrives on The Roku Channel, Expanding the Streaming Platform Wars
Why Attraction-Grabbing Stations Win at Tech Events
Why Nvidia Let Go of Arm, and Why It Matters Now
When the Market Wants a Story, Not Numbers: Rethinking AMD’s Q4 Selloff
Accelerate 2026, May 21–22, 2026, Salt Palace Convention Center
JSNation 2026, June 11 & June 15, Amsterdam and Remote
ICMC 2026, July 30–31, Long Beach
Elevate 2026, April 22–24, 2026, Atlanta
WWDC 2026, June 8–12, Cupertino & Online
Zip Forward Europe 2026, April 16, 2026, London
AI Summit: Operationalizing Intelligence and Driving Innovation, April 16, 2026, Woburn, Massachusetts
GTC 2026, March 16–19, San Jose
Taiwan’s AI Ecosystem Steps Into the Spotlight at NVIDIA GTC, March 16–19, 2026
COMPUTEX 2026, June 2–5, Taipei

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography