All the Itaniums I have dealt with come pre-mounted to the heatsink and the CPU/heatsink are swapped as a unit.I think there is ia64 support in gentoo and debian. Software is not an issue for me, I want to make the hardware working first. I meant CPU card, not board, sort of additional adapter.
I know, but I do need it to have working ia64 with a minimal budget, so I would appreciate any advice.All the Itaniums I have dealt with come pre-mounted to the heatsink and the CPU/heatsink are swapped as a unit.
Personally, I wouldn't bother, even as an experiment, not worth the hassle.
I don't have any recommendations. The entire IT industry abandoned Itanium 10 years ago in favor of Xeon X86.I know, but I do need it to have working ia64 with a minimal budget, so I would appreciate any advice.
I was probably exaggerating some on my 10 years ago, but this article -- https://www.techrepublic.com/article/save-the-date-itanium-will-finally-die-at-the-end-of-2025/Not fair to say the entire IT industry, just that x64 took up the need for large amounts of memory and it wasn't annoying to deal with. Easier is better.
HP has support out through 2025 planned. Intel stopped making the chips though, so it is going to be an interesting gamble if they don't have a lot spares laying around.
I looked around a little, didn't find anything I would want to spend money on. Looks about $500-600 just to get started. Might as well put those CPUs up for sale, and buy a complete server.