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 |  | Gary Beach, CIO |  |  | Peter Coffee, eWEEK |  |  | Liu Jiuru, China Computerworld |  |  | Michael Miller, PC Magazine |  |  | Giorgio Panzeri, Editor in Chief, PC Professionale – Italy |  |  | Terence Stephen, Executive Editor, Hardware Mag Malaysia |  |  | Jon Stokes, Senior CPU Editor, Ars Technica |  |  | Jimmy Tang, Editor-in-Chief, Hardware Zone |  |  | Y.H. Tang, PC Market, Hong Kong |  |  | Martin Veitch, IT Week, United Kingdom |  |  | Mike Vizard, CRN | 
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Studio 64 Liu Jiuru Editor-In-Chief, China Computerworld
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“Ever since the turn of the century, information technology has been adopted at an ever-increasing speed by a wider sector of the community. Today, information systems of government departments and private enterprises, as well, are processing video, audio and non-formatted data at terabyte speeds. Given the trend, the demand for 64-bit processors with powerful data processing ability and an enormous address space is expected to continue to rise to even higher levels.
Until now, the relatively slow development of I/O technologies has failed to offer the support needed by a 64-bit processor to deliver its optimal performance. We are pleased to see the recent adoption of new technologies such as network storage, iSCSI, SATA, InfiniBand, 10GB Ethernet, OC-192 and PCI-X as these new technologies can help relieve the performance bottleneck formed at I/Os. Whichever way you look at it, the future of the 64-bit processor is more promising than ever before.
Like all other end-users, we are looking forward to the day when 64-bit computing will become the mainstream configuration of computing systems. The introduction of the [AMD 64] architecture will undoubtedly speed up this process and expedite the final adoption of 64-bit computing by the majority of the end-users.”
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