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Ampere Teams Up With Oregon State University’s Open Source Lab

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  • It will allow members of the community to develop and test open source projects on the Arm AArch64 architecture platform
  • The Open Source Lab is a nonprofit organisation working for the advancement of open source technologies

Ampere has announced that it has donated its first-generation Ampere eMAG server processors to Oregon State University’s Open Source Lab. It will allow members of the community to develop and test open source projects on the Arm AArch64 architecture platform.

Mauri Whalen, vice president of software engineering at Ampere said, “Ampere is committed to providing access to an open environment to expand the ecosystem and optimize the developer experience for next-generation cloud applications. We look forward to working with OSU’s Open Source Lab and the OpenStack community to expand the development resources to enable open innovation.”

Open source culture of accessibility and increased productivity

The Open Source Lab is a nonprofit organisation working for the advancement of open source technologies. The lab aims to accelerate the growth of high-impact open source software projects and promote an open source culture of accessibility and increased productivity. It plans to do so by enabling innovative projects and distributing software to millions of users globally.

Lance Albertson, director of Oregon State University, Open Source Lab said, The OSU Open Source Lab has partnered with Ampere to provide free access to the AARCH64 platform for FOSS projects. We have built an OpenStack cluster using Ampere Computing eMAG AARCH64 servers to provide flexible access using virtual machines for projects,” “Besides being impressed with the performance and ease of use, we’ve been very happy with the lower power consumption the eMAG servers use. In a rack that includes 12 eMAG HR350A servers, 2 10g Arista switches, and one ToR HP switch, the 12 servers only use around 60 per cent of the total power in the rack with the rest being used by the three switches. “

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