Itanic

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What Does Itanic Mean?

“Itanic” is an IT slang term for an Intel processor, or a set of processors, officially known as Itanium. Released in 2001, the first Itanium chip was not popular and was only made briefly. Successive editions had varying appeal within the industry.

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Techopedia Explains Itanic

Prior to the advent of the Itanium processor, Intel had been experimenting with Reduced Instruction Set Computing (RISC) and its processing limits. After its release, engineers found that Itanium was not a lot better than other RISC or CISC computing systems. Intel sold only a few thousand of these processors on the market. A successor, Itanium 2, came out in 2002 and was mostly implemented on enterprise servers.

The Itanium chips had been in development for years, and were highly anticipated. Therefore, when their success was significantly less than anticipated, they were seen as a failure, hence the comparison with the sinking of the Titanic.

Itanium 2 improved a memory handling system widely criticized as inefficient and unoptimized. The Itanium 2 chip and subsequent releases gained prominence in enterprise server markets. However, critics of the recent Intel “Kittson” and “Poulson” chips suggest that these models are also not innovative enough and do not move the industry forward, bringing up again the derogatory epithet “Itanic.”

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Margaret Rouse
Technology expert
Margaret Rouse
Technology expert

Margaret is an award-winning writer and educator known for her ability to explain complex technical topics to a non-technical business audience. Over the past twenty years, her IT definitions have been published by Que in an encyclopedia of technology terms and cited in articles in the New York Times, Time Magazine, USA Today, ZDNet, PC Magazine, and Discovery Magazine. She joined Techopedia in 2011. Margaret’s idea of ​​a fun day is to help IT and business professionals to learn to speak each other’s highly specialized languages.