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This week's x86 headlines
All other stories and details below
PC Week Online FTC May widen probe of Intel
C/Net IBM forced out of Intel chip market
Electronic Buyers' News Intel Considers Taking Stake In Micron
The Register Slot One Cyrix now unlikely
EE Times Internal layout of Intel's Merced comes to light

 

x86 Weekly News

Collected By Robert R. Collins

Week of September 28, 1998

Older News

October 2, 1998

Microsoft killed the PowerPC 615

October 1, 1998
The Register

An insider at IBM has responded to the PowerPC 615 story we wrote yesterday with some hard facts -- and corrections --that cannot be ignored.

The insider said that Motorola, although it knew of the programme, was never involved and Somerset and IBM Austin were not in the picture too.

The IBM Micro team at Burlington performed the 615 miracle, with 250 engineers involved. Even after the programme finished, he said, 40 or so remained at that site.

Related Stories

615 it still alive in a Transmeta way

TI preps Merced-compliant power supply controller

By Stephan Ohr

October 2, 1998
EE Times

Texas Instruments Inc. will take the wraps off a power-supply controller next week that will support Intel Corp.'s upcoming Merced processor. The TPS5210 breaks new ground in transient response and current-handling capability, and is being released as details emerge of Merced's power requirements and architecture.

No published information exists on the power requirements of the IA-64 architecture, which will be first implemented in the Merced processor scheduled to appear in mid-2000. But discussions with industry sources suggest a continuation of the trend toward lower core voltages, higher output current and faster transient response times exhibited with the advanced Pentium parts.

Related Stories

Internal layout of Intel's Merced comes to light

October 1, 1998

Intel denies Pentium II supply problems

By Mike Magee

October 1, 1998
The Register

Chip giant Intel has denied that there is any shortage of its CPUs. That follows a claim from US company PC Connection yesterday that its results were affected by changes in Intel's manufacturing schedule.

But a UK distributor has confirmed that Intel products are on allocation until the end of the year.

 

615 it still alive in a Transmeta way

by Mike Magee

September 30, 1998
The Register

We almost hesitate to write another Transmeta story after the barrage of mails and hate mails we got.

But this one is too good to miss.

Some of our elder readers may well remember the Motorola PowerPC 615 and if you do a search on our old site you'll find what we thought about it three or so years ago.

Related Stories

Transmeta to use IBM fabs after Cyrix loss

Transmeta transmogrified by Linux founder

Transmeta letters to the editors

Transmeta letters to the editors

By Spam of Birmingham

September 30, 1998
The Register

An unprecedented flood of emails arrived after our Transmeta stories this week. Some of them were hate mail which was interesting.

Exactly why do people get so wound up about this, we ask ourselves?

Anyway, the replies were so interesting that here's a selection of the ones that didn't use obscene language!

Related Stories

Transmeta to use IBM fabs after Cyrix loss

Transmeta transmogrified by Linux founder

615 it still alive in a Transmeta way

September 30 1998

Katmai outgunned by Motorola's AltiVec

By Mike Magee

September 30, 1998
The Register

Motorola is close to shipping its additional instruction set for the G3 (PowerPC 750) processor, codenamed AltiVec. The instructions will ultimately be included in the G4, sources added.

The technology is likely to be unveiled at the Microprocessor Forum and according to reports will give Katmai a run for its money.

The AltiVec instructions were, according to the same sources, the reasons IBM and Motorola fell out over the PowerPC earlier this year.

 

K6-2, Windows 95 mismatch cured

By Michael Kanellos

September 29, 1998
C/Net

A relatively obscure, but annoying, glitch has been discovered when the fastest versions of the K6-2 processor from Advanced Micro Devices is used in conjunction with Windows 95, but the company and Microsoft have taken steps to eradicate it.

The flaw occurs when Windows 95 is run on 350-MHz K6-2 processors, according to AMD. Essentially, when a user attempts to boot up, the computer replies that a "Windows Protection" error has occurred and that the computer must be rebooted. Typically, the flaw does not repeat itself on the reboot.

 

National Semi CEO: IBM-Cyrix Pact Unhealthy

By Richard Richtmyer

September 29, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

National Semiconductor told a group of financial analysts Tuesday that its decision to integrate its Cyrix subsidiary's microprocessor operations within its South Portland, Maine fab will result in long-term cost savings and put the company in a good position to achieve its goal of providing system-on-a-chip products by June 1999.

"As we fill South Portland, we expect to see about $15 million dropping through to the company's earnings statement," said Don Macleod, National's chief financial officer.

 
September 29 1998

Slot One Cyrix now unlikely

By Mike Magee

September 29, 1998
The Register

NatSemi-Cyrix said that it was now unlikely that it would produce a Slot One based solution.

That is despite the fact that it has a solution in its labs and that the distribution channel has pressured it to produce Slot One because of demand from dealers.

The change in heart, according to a senior source at the Cyrix group at NatSemi Europe, was because of changes in the market.

 

Internal layout of Intel's Merced comes to light

By Alexander Wolfe

September 29, 1998
EE Times

The first detailed block diagram of Intel Corp.'s upcoming Merced microprocessor has been obtained by EE Times.

The floor plan of the chip indicates a massive floating-point unit. This would be in keeping with Intel's stated design goal of keeping Merced's performance in step with anything its RISC competitors can throw at it.

However, an initial inspection of the floor plan appears to show that, rather than loading the chip down with dozens of execution units in a bid to enable numerous instructions to run at the same time, Intel's designers may have taken a more elegant approach toward parallel computing.

 

AMD fixes obscure K6-2 flaw

By Michael Kanellos

September 28, 1998
C/Net

A relatively obscure but annoying glitch has been discovered in the fastest versions of the K6-2 processor from Advanced Micro Devices, but the company and Microsoft have taken steps to eradicate it.

The flaw occurs when Windows 95 is run on 350-MHz K6-2 processors, according to AMD. Essentially, when a user attempts to boot up, the computer replies that a "Windows Protection" error has occurred and that the computer must be rebooted. Typically, the flaw does not repeat itself on the reboot.

 

Processor Talk
Separations and Quarrels

By Andreas Stiller

Issue 19, 1998
c't Magazine

Relationship problems everywhere: Berti Vogts, coach of the German soccer team, quits, the server manufacturers IBM, HP and Compaq rebel against Intel, National is thinking about a divorce and a government decree forces Korean manufacturers to come to an agreement about their DRAM-children.

With a surprise maneuver IBM, HP and Compaq pointed out a crisis. Even though they have a big lead and hold place one to three in the information technology business, they left the competency for technological guidelines to one single semiconductor manufacturer: Intel. In the past only taking interest in the processors, Intel now plays a key role in most PC standards, be it PCI, AGP, ACPI, IrDA, Rambus and what-have-you. On top of that Intel is also the leader in the chip market, that pours the standards into Silicon so-to-speak: the chip sets.

 
September 28 1998

FTC May widen probe of Intel

By Lisa DiCarlo

September 25, 1998
PC Week Online

The Federal Trade Commission is investigating Intel Corp.'s activities in the graphics chip market and may broaden its original antitrust charges against the chip maker, according to several sources.

Since June, FTC lawyers have been interviewing leading graphics companies to determine if Intel is leveraging its overwhelming CPU market share to become a dominant force in graphics as well, sources said.

 

Intel's Barrett says Dell is the target of PCI-X consortium

By Richard Barry

September 25, 1998
PC Week

Craig Barrett reckons the proposed PCI-X bus standard -- a potential successor to Intel's PCI standard -- is not, as is widely believed, an attempt to loosen Intel's grip on the computer industry. He believes instead that Dell is the target of the PCI-X consortium, made up of industry heavyweights, Compaq, IBM and HP.

Dell, which is challenging Compaq for No. 1 slot in the United States, is being frozen out by the group in an attempt to gain some competitive advantage over it in the server arena, Barrett said.

 

IBM Micro at end of x.86 trail

By Mike Magee

September 27, 1998
The Register

No further production of x.86 clone chips from IBM Micro is likely, following the severing of ties between it and National Semiconductor/Cyrix, it has emerged.

And Cyrix will now try to switch existing customers of 6x86 to its own products, according to sources close to the firm.

The large sum of money paid by Cyrix to IBM, first exclusively reported here, does not include any patent cross licensing, the same sources said.

 

Transmeta to use IBM fabs after Cyrix loss

By Mike Magee

September 28, 1998
The Register

Reliable sources in Silicon Valley said early today that IBM Microelectronics is to take up some of the slack in its fabs caused by the loss of Cyrix business by building chips for Transmeta.

The fabless valley start-up creates alternative VLSI chips for the multimedia market. Perhaps more significantly, Linus Torvalds, the designer of the now famous Linux OS, also works for Transmeta.

Related Stories

Transmeta transmogrified by Linux founder

Transmeta transmogrified by Linux founder

By Mike Magee

September 28, 1998
The Register

More details have emerged about a switch in direction Transmeta made when it hired Linux inventor Linus Torvalds earlier this year. (See story, Transmeta to use IBM fabs)

Reliable sources said that the company has re-engineered itself and is now preparing a Risc processor which will be optimised for Windows NT 5.0, and which will effectively abandon legacy support for Dos and 16 bit Windows.

Transmeta to use IBM fabs after Cyrix loss

Intel poaches PowerPC vet for Austin R&D labs

By John Lettice

September 28, 1998
The Register

Intel has pulled in a PowerPC Somerset Design Center veteran to head-up a new long-range R&D centre in Austin, Texas. Mark McDermott comes from the Motorola side of the old PowerPC alliance, and also ran the system on a chip design group at Motorola's Advanced Systems Technology Lab.

It's not yet entirely clear what he and his team will be designing - Intel is reportedly saying that's going to depend on the staff he hires, and if this is the case we can maybe think of him and the company being on some kind of fishing expedition, looking for star designers and star technologies.

 

Xeon is still struggling with its troubled youth

By Lisa DiCarlo and Carmen Nobel

September 28, 1998
PC Week Online

The problems facing Intel Corp.'s 3-month-old Xeon chips continue to mount even as the company prepares the October launch of the 450MHz version.

Earlier this month, the Santa Clara, Calif., company asked several top OEM customers to return about 1,000 unsold Xeon chips to be upgraded with new stepping, the microcode that's built into the firmware around a CPU to enable additional functionality, such as dual processing and multiprocessing.

 

Low-cost chip war intensifies

By Michael Kanellos

September 25, 1998
C/Net

Like two late-night TV pitchmen, Intel and Advanced Micro Devices will both be vying for the right to say they will not be undersold when it comes to low-cost processors this fall.

Intel is expected to cut prices on its Pentium II and Celeron processors October 25, a move that will be followed by price cuts on AMD's K6-2 and K6 processors in the same week.

 

IBM forced out of Intel chip market

By Michael Kanellos

September 25, 1998
C/Net

The first casualty of the low-cost processor market is paradoxically one of the largest players in the computer industry: IBM.

IBM will have to discontinue its line of 6X86 MX processors as a result of the termination of its foundry agreement with National Semiconductor, according to sources at National. The chip has been used in Aptiva consumer computers sold in Europe and Canada as well as computers from regional domestic dealers like Tiger Direct.

 

Intel Considers Taking Stake In Micron

By Jack Robertson

September 25, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

Intel is currently negotiating with Micron Technology to take a minor equity stake in the DRAM maker, a move that would give Intel a steady supply of memory, and Micron capital to pursue its expansion plans, Electronic Buyers' News has learned.

Spokespeople at both Intel (company profile) and Micron (company profile) declined to comment.

 

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