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You know that's all just a software thing. If Microsoft decided to open Windows for ARM then it would no longer apply.
Yes but people nowadays go mostly for the cloud. Cloud providers will make scale ARM and sell it cheaper and you won't be replacing RAM on those for sure... at some point your management will simply crush your budget you'll be forced on ARM.
Okay, now you got me curious. Gimme examples of companies using ARM servers.
Not who you were responding to but, my company does this in AWS. To be fair, the entire platform is running in EKS so it's not much more difficult than updating the CI build pipelines to build multi-arch containers, adding additional nodepools, and scaling down the amd64 ones. This was tedious but not difficult to do. I keep a small set of amd64 nodes for off the shelf software that doesn't support arm.. I think the only thing left on those now is newrelic agents. Once we move off of them the x86_64 nodes can be killed entirely.
This ended up saving us tens of thousands of dollars per month. The next step is to move the bulk of workloads to spot instances. I'll be preferring arm but if there is only capacity for x86_64, I'll have that option because of the multi-arch containers. This is going to save even more money and force developers to build applications more tolerant of node failure in the process.
If we exclude all cloud providers who sell ARM like Google, Amazon and Oracle. Facebook actively uses ARM at scale and I personally have seen medium size companies (~200-500 employees) using it simply because their backend run fine and it's cheaper.
Vodafone is now into ARM as well: https://www.eenewseurope.com/en/vodafone-fast-tracks-arm-based-chipsets-for-open-ran/