It goes deeper than Little's Law. Every decent textbook on introductory queuing theory has the result that on a normalized basis, fast server > multi-server > multi-queue. That analysis admits almost arbitrary levels of depth of analysis and still holds true.
Your observation that computing architectures have chased fast server for decades is apt. There's a truism in computing that those who build systems are doomed to relearn the lessons of the early ages of networks, whether they studied them in school or not. But kudos to whoever went through the exercise again.
Your observation that computing architectures have chased fast server for decades is apt. There's a truism in computing that those who build systems are doomed to relearn the lessons of the early ages of networks, whether they studied them in school or not. But kudos to whoever went through the exercise again.