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This Week's x86 Headlines
All other stories and details below
C/Net AMD gets Rambus memory help
C/Net AMD unveils K7 chip design
EE Times Rise unveils MP6 processor to challenge Intel
Electronic Buyers' News Cyrix opts against Intel’s ‘slot’ interface for new chip
PC Week Online HP describes plans for first IA-64 chip set
C/Net Intel details Merced
The Register Intel doctors Foster to extend life of IA-32 architecture
Electronic Buyers' News IDT's Centaur will redirect MPU roadmap
Electronic Buyers' News Cyrix adopts RDRAM interface for M3 chips
EE Times Cyrix serves Jalapeno core
ZD Net News Intel's Merced may violate S3 patent
C/Net Intel to invest in Micron
The Register How Intel and HP shield patents from prying eyes

 

x86 Weekly News

Collected By Robert R. Collins

Week of October 12, 1998

Older News

October 16, 1998

Intel's Merced may violate S3 patent

By Reuters

October 15, 1998
ZD Net News

Intel Corp.'s primary microprocessor for the future may violate a patent held by S3 Inc. of Santa Clara, Calif., people familiar with the matter told the Wall Street Journal.

Intel's new chip, code named Merced, may infringe on a S3 patent, chip-patent expert Richard Belgard told the paper.

S3 bought the patent along with others last year from Exponential Technology Inc., which no longer exists, the report said. S3 paid $10 million for nearly 50 patents from Exponential, the report said.

 

Intel to invest in Micron

By Sandeep Junnarkar

October 16, 1998
C/Net

Chipmaker giant Intel will make a $500 million equity investment in Micron Technology, the companies announced today.

Intel said its investment in Micron is part of its strategy to support the development and supply of next generation memory products. Intel also said that it hopes to help drive personal computer industry growth by accelerating the adoption of Direct RDRAM , a high-speed memory interface technology developed by Rambus.

See Today's Related Stories

Intel Details Merced Chip

By Marcia Savage

October 14, 1998
Computer Reseller News

Intel Corp. Wednesday presented details of its upcoming 64-bit Merced processor and outlined its road map for future high-end processors at the Microprocessor Forum, held here.

Due for production in mid-2000, Merced is the first in Intel's series of 64-bit processors targeting the high-end server and workstation market. Stephen Smith, corporate vice president of Intel's microprocessor products group, said the processor is "inherently scaleable."

 

Intel tips plans for two additional IA-64 CPUs

By Alexander Wolfe

October 15, 1998
EE Times

Intel Corp. revealed long-term plans on Wednesday (Oct. 14) for two successors to its upcoming 64-bit Merced microprocessor.

Merced, which is due in mid-2000, will be followed in late 2001 by a previously announced processor code-named McKinley. In a presentation at the Microprocessor Forum, Stephen Smith, vice president of Intel's microprocessor products group, said that two additional IA-64 architecture devices will follow.

 

How Intel and HP shield patents from prying eyes

by Graham Lea

October 15, 1998
The Register

If you've ever wondered what Intel and HP might be doing together in the microprocessor design area, then be sure to drop by the Institute for the Development of Emerging Architectures (IDEA) in Cupertino.

Last year it was awarded a patent, US-5652859 for a "Method and apparatus for handling snoops in multiprocessor caches having internal buffer queues", and it also has four others - with no doubt more in the, er, cache. So what's interesting about this? Well, don't apply there for a job because IDEA turns out to be a front organisation for Intel and HP, who assign some of their patents to the Institute.

 

With Merced delayed, RISC chip makers unfurl road maps

By Lisa DiCarlo

October 16, 1998
PC Week Online

Hoping to capitalize on the delay of Intel Corp.'s next-generation Merced processor, some of the leading RISC chip makers this week spelled out plans for their high-performance 64-bit processors.

Motorola Semiconductor Products Sector described the next generation of the PowerPC, called the G4, Compaq Computer Corp. offered details about the next two versions of Alpha, and Hewlett Packard Co. laid out a four-year road map for PA-RISC.

 

Rambus reports strong quarter

By Stephen Shankland

October 15, 1998
C/Net

Rambus, developer of an up-and-coming computer memory technology, announced fourth-quarter net income of $1.75 million, or 7 cents per diluted share, compared with net income of $1.06 million, or 4 cents per share, for the same quarter a year ago.

Those earnings were in line with analysts' expectations of 7 cents share, according to First Call.

The company's third-quarter net income was $1.7 million.

 
Today's Related Stories

Intel takes 6 percent stake in Micron Technology

By Margaret Kane

October 15, 1998
ZD Net News

Intel Corp. is taking out a 6 percent stake worth $500 million in memory-maker Micron Technology Inc.

Intel said today that the Micron investment will help fuel development of a special type of memory.

Intel has been pushing for new systems to use a new expandable memory known as Direct Rambus Dynamic RAM (DRDRAM). The memory was developed by Rambus Inc. with input from Intel, and is seen as the successor to 100MHz synchronous DRAM.

 

Intel stakes Micron for $500 million

By John Lettice

October 15, 1998
The Register

Intel has bought a $500 million stake in Micron Technology, the company which, after its takeover of TI's memory operations earlier this year, is the flagship of the US DRAM business. The Intel investment represents approximately 6 per cent of Micron's stock.

According to Intel, the investment is part of the company's strategy "to support the development and supply of next generation memory products and to help drive PC industry growth by accelerating the development of Direct RDRAM," Rabus' high speed memory technology. The investment will also however help Micron out - the DRAM company claims that it will have no digestion problems in assimilating TI's meory operations, but with its old enemies from Korea facing serious financial difficulties, Micron has a golden opportunity to go onto the attack, provided it has the money to do so.

 

Intel Invests $500 Million In Micron

October 16, 1998
Semiconductor Business News

Intel announced Friday that it will make a $500 million equity investment in Micron Technology. Intel will acquire stock rightsexchangeable for common stock representing approximately 6 percent ofMicron's outstanding common stock. The investment in Micron is part of Intel's strategy to support the development and supply of next-generation memory products and to help drive PC-industry growth by accelerating the adoption of Direct RDRAM, a high-speed memory interface technology developed by Rambus. By providing additional financial resources, the investment by Intel, in Santa Clara, Calif., should enhance Micron's competitive position in the DRAM industry.  
October 15, 1998

HP chooses AMD for Terminal market

By Drew Cullen

October 14, 1998
VNU Business News

Chipmaker AMD is to supply the CPU for HP's entry to the Windows-Based Terminal market.

According to an HP spokeswoman the CPU is an AMD 486, and the company plans to establish a premier position around the world in thin-client computing - which should mean significant volumes for AMD.

 

Intel thrives, LSI looks to layoffs

By Michael Kanellos

October 12, 1998
C/Net

A good news/bad news scenario will likely play itself out this week in earnings announcements from semiconductor companies.

On the positive side, Intel is expected to report revenues in excess of the projections it released last month, according to some analysts. Accordingly, the company is expected tomorrow to report earnings of 80 cents per share or more.

 

Probing the role of antitrust laws in high-tech

By Lisa DiCarlo

October 15, 1998
PC Week Online

A Federal Trade Commission commissioner on Wednesday defended the government's increasing focus on antitrust violations in the technology industry.

The commissioner, Mozelle Thompson, gave a short speech here at the Microprocessor Forum before participating in a discussion panel with antitrust attorneys and law professors on the government's role in the industry.

 
Microprocessor Forum Coverage

Intel downplays Merced, favouring McKinley successor

By Dominique Deckmyn

October 15, 1998
VNU Business News

Intel downplayed its Merced 64bit processor at the Microprocessor Forum in this week and instead emphasised its successor, McKinley, and a new high-performance 32-bit CPU, codenamed Foster.

The Foster chip is based on a new 32-bit processor core and will match the performance of Merced, Intel claims.

 

Intel details Merced

By Brooke Crothers

October 14, 1998
C/Net

Intel provided concrete details of its 64-bit Merced processor for the first time at the Microprocessor Forum today and announced a low-cost 64-bit chip architecture.

Providing particulars that are esoteric but essential for moving Intel to a 64-bit future, Merced targets high-end computer markets that Intel can only dream of now. The chip is due out in mid-2000.

 

Intel doctors Foster to extend life of IA-32 architecture

By Tony Smith

October 15, 1998
The Register

Intel revealed details of its future IA-32 processor technology, codenamed Foster, at this year's Microprocessor Forum. The company also discussed its positioning of the IA-64-based Merced and its successors, McKinley, Madison and Deerfield.

Foster is set to ship late 2000/early 2001 and, according to Intel Microprocessor Products Group VP Steve Smith, will be based on a new core design which will replace the P6-based core currently used in Xeon and to be extended with the Katmai multimedia instructions in Tanner and then Cascades.

 

Intel looks to the future -- it's big and fast

By Matthew Loney

October 15, 1998
ZDNet UK

In stark contrast to Tuesday's "small is beautiful" theme, Wednesday was "big is better" day here at the Microprocessor Forum.

The major processor manufacturers discussed future directions on the high-end of the processor market, highlighted by Intel Corp.'s further outlining of its plans for the next four years.

 

Intel adds to chip road map

By Andy Santoni

October 14, 1998
InfoWorld Electric

Just a week after disclosing its road map for workstation and server CPUs, Intel updated its plans by revealing the names of two future 64-bit processors at
the Microprocessor Forum here Wednesday.

Following Merced, the first 64-bit, Intel architecture (IA-64) CPU, Intel will update the line late in 2001 with McKinley, reiterated Stephen L. Smith, corporate vice president and
general manager of Intel's Santa Clara processor division. McKinley should debut with clock speeds faster than 1 GHz, he said.
 

Intel discloses more of roadmap

By Mark Hachman

October 15, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

A week after Intel Corp. outlined its 64-bit roadmap through 2000, the chip giant published a second edition.

As part of a presentation at this week's Microprocessor Forum, Stephen L. Smith, corporate vice-president of Intel's Microprocessor Group, added the names “Madison” and “Deerfield” to its 64-bit roadmap.

At the same time, he provided some additional details of the architecture of Intel's first 64-bit chip, Merced.

 

Intel offers low-power processors

By Andy Santoni

October 14, 1998
InfoWorld Electric

Between presenting papers on its 32-bit and 64-bit PC processor plans at the Microprocessor Forum here this week, Intel switched gears and introduced low-power embedded CPUs for handheld and other applications.

Low-power, 166-MHz and 266-MHz Pentium MMX processors target point-of-sale, industrial automation, and communications equipment. Priced at about $60 and $100, respectively, the two CPUs are available in a low-profile package to fit tight spaces.

 

Intel states its case for the embedded market

By Craig Matsumoto

October 14, 1998
EE Times

Intel Corp. made its pitch for the embedded market at the Microprocessor Forum conference on Tuesday when it announced a new StrongARM processor, as well as new embedded parts from the Pentium and i960 families.

Intel provided details of the SA-1101 StrongARM device, which was previously announced as the processor used in Hewlett-Packard Co.'s latest portable computer. The SA-1101 is noteable as the Intel's first new StrongARM device, and more are certain to follow, said Mark Casey, StrongARM marketing director for Intel. Specifically, Intel is working on an SA-2 core, a follow-up to the SA-1 inherited from Digital Semiconductor, Casey said, though he wouldn't say when the new core would be completed.

 

Intel aims embedded processors at new applications

October 14, 1998
Tech Web

New types of computing devices that connect to PCs or interact with them could be enabled by a series of 32-bit embedded products announced here by Intel Corp.

These devices include handheld consumer appliances, communications equipment, point-of-sale (POS) terminals, PC-like industrial automation systems and data-storage management systems.

 

AMD in servers?

By Matt Loney

October 15, 1998
IT Week

AMD said Tuesday that its next generation processor, the K7, will be enabled for multiprocessor systems, creating a possible threat to Intel in the low-end server market.

However, when presenting this vision, director of engineering for AMD's K7 programme Dirk Meyer, added a corollary: "Multiprocessing is clearly not our thrust," he said, "but with the K7 we want to be in a position to address markets we haven't been in before."

 

AMD lays out K7 competitor to Katmai

By David Lammers

October 14, 1998
EE Times

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. placed its K7 microprocessor at stage center of the Microprocessor Forum. Expected to hit the market in mid-1999, K7 will target Intel Corp.'s lucrative 85 percent share of the personal computer microprocessor market.

The K7 is an X86 design that takes AMD further afield of Intel in terms of its instruction set, bus architecture and chip set support. The K7, which is expected to debut with a clock speed above 500 MHz, is to be AMD's counter to Intel's Katmai processor with the Katmai New Instructions, set to hit the market in the first quarter.

 

AMD’s K7 bus will speed past Intel’s 133MHz

By Mark Hachman

October 14, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

Advanced Micro Devices Inc.'s presentation at the Microprocessor Forum in San Jose yesterday was slightly less bombastic than the keynote delivered last year by chairman and chief executive Jerry Sanders.

But AMD surprised the audience when it announced that EV-6, a bus architecture that it licensed from Digital Equipment Corp. for use in its forthcoming K7 microprocessors and is interchangeable with the Alpha chip, will run at 200 MHz, which is much faster than the 133 MHz bus speed Intel Corp. has proposed.

 

A Year Ago: AMD paves way for K7, faster 3D K6 chips

By Arif Mohamed

October 15, 1998
ZD Net News

AMD has revealed plans for a 3D K6 chip with a L2 cache that runs at the same speed as the processor.

The firm also plans to unveil the next-generation K7 processor at the 1998 Microprocessor Forum in San Francisco. The K7 is expected to go into production spring 1999, said AMD.

 

IDT's Centaur will redirect MPU roadmap

By Mark Hachman

October 14, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

Centaur Technology Inc., the microprocessor subsidiary of Integrated Device Technology Inc., confirmed EBN's earlier report that the company had reworked its roadmap due to limitations in clock speed.

Centaur will “redirect” development of the WinChip2+NB, the successor to Centaur's WinChip 2 microprocessor, to include graphics.

 

Cyrix serves Jalapeno core

By David Lammers

October 14, 1998
EE Times

The Cyrix division of National Semiconductor Corp. described its Jalapeno core as a 600-MHz "memory centric" design that will be used in Cyrix's M3 family of processors, which will begin sampling late in 1999.

The design will include a Rambus ASIC cell as an on-chip memory controller that will support 3.2-Gbytes of bandwidth between the processor and a Rambus in-line memory module (RIMM).

 

National sets sights on low end

By Michael Kanellos

October 14, 1998
C/Net

For a computer vendor that wants a low-end chip, Cyrix is working on the answer.

The processor subsidiary of National Semiconductor is in the process of expanding its silicon lineup for the sub-$1,000 computer and Internet appliance markets. By next year, the computer vendor will be marketing four distinct classes of processors that will be suited for everything from low-cost multimedia PCs to DVD players, set-top boxes, and the always fashionable wearable PC.

 
October 14, 1998

Microprocessor Forum offers peek at next year's products

By Lisa DiCarlo

October 13, 1998
PC Week Online

Five X86 microprocessor companies provided technical details about their 1999 products Tuesday as the 11th annual Microprocessor Forum got under way.

Design engineers were on hand here from Intel Corp., Advanced Micro Devices Inc., National Semiconductor Inc.'s Cyrix Corp. subsidiary, Centaur Technology Inc. and newcomer Rise Technology Corp.

Intel, of Santa Clara, Calif., gave a few more technical details about its Katmai New Instructions, a set of 70 three-dimensional instructions that will be embedded in the Tanner and Katmai processors in the first quarter of 1999. Both of those chips, for servers/workstations and performance desktops, respectively, will be released at 500MHz.

See more Microprocessor Forum Reports from Intel, AMD, Centaur, Cyrix, and Rise Technologies

IDT reports a loss for fiscal 2Q

October 14, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

Citing continued pressure from a weak semiconductor market, Integrated Device Technology Inc. saw more red ink for the second fiscal quarter ended Sept. 27.

IDT's sales fell 2.9% sequentially from $134.5 million to $130.6 million in the most recent quarter. Year-over-year sales dropped 9.2% from $143.8 million.

 

Intel dips despite earnings news

By Dawn Kawamoto

October 14, 1998
C/Net

Shares of Intel dipped nearly one percent despite the news that the chipmaker had leapt past Wall Street estimates for its third-quarter earnings yesterday, driven by a healthy pace for worldwide PC sales.

The stock was down 0.97 percent or 0.81 points to 82.75 in early trading, and has reached a high of 95.63 and a low of 65.65 during the past 52 weeks.

In looking at the coming fourth quarter, several analysts remain bullish on the company.

 

Slimmer chips for common devices

By Stephen Shankland

October 13, 1998
C/Net

Intel announced improvements to several chips designed to be embedded in electronic equipment ranging from cash registers to computer network routers to handheld computers.

The modifications include a lower-profile Pentium processor that generates less heat and uses less power, said Joe Jensen, director of marketing for Intel's Embedded Microcomputer Division. These new low-power Pentiums run at 166 MHz and 266 MHz, but unlike their desktop cousins, they rise a mere 1.5 millimeters above the circuit board.

 

HP has two-pronged chip plan

By Stephen Shankland and Michael Kanellos

October 13, 1998
C/Net

Hewlett-Packard is adopting a two-pronged strategy for the future of its processors, developing workstations and servers that can use either HP's PA-RISC chips or Intel's IA-64 "Merced" chips.

While HP plans to extend its PA-RISC architecture on into the year 2003 with an 8900 chip running at a speed of 1.2 GHz (1200 MHz), the PA-RISC chip apparently will be phased out eventually

 

HP takes on embedded IA-64 computing engine

By By Ron Wilson

October 13, 1998
EE Times

Members of the Hewlett-Packard Labs team that originally conceived the IA-64 Epic (explicitly parallel instruction computing) architecture have turned their attention to custom-configured Epic engines for embedded computing.

"We believe it is possible to start out with the high-level code for an embedded application, and compile not only machine code, but also an optimized custom wide-word machine to execute the code," said B.R. Rau, senior research scientist at the HP Labs Computer Research Center.

 
Today's Microprocessor Forum Coverage

Filling Intel's holes -- alternative chip makers aim to be where chip giant isn't

By Robert Lemos

October 14, 1998
ZD Net News

Running against common wisdom, three microprocessor vendors unveiled technology on Tuesday that aims to steal market share from Intel at the bottom of the PC market.

Their aims are modest.

"We don't have the world's fastest microprocessor," said Centaur Technology President Glenn Henry, "but we have the lowest cost -- and we are still in business."

 

AMD continues to challenge Intel

By Will Wade

October 13, 1998
Semiconductor Business News

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. finally revealed the details of its upcoming K7 microprocessor, and as the company continues to roll out more advanced processors, AMD is beginning to look more and more like arch-rival Intel Corp.

"We had been relegated primarily to the sub-$1,000 PC market, but in 1998 we have started to creep out of that niche," said Michael Steele, product marketing manager for the K6 family. "We now have a complete line of solutions for the entire range of PCs."

 

AMD K7 snatches at Intel high-end crown

By Tony Smith

October 13, 1998
The Register

AMD's forthcoming K7 processor is set to tackle Intel's high end CPUs head on, with a ground-up new core design, high-speed system bus technology, a multi-processing oriented architecture and a Slot 1 configuration.

K7 supports clock speeds of 500MHz and up. Initially, it will support bus speeds of up to 200MHz, using the Alpha EV6 bus technology, developed by Digital, but that will rise to 400MHz in the next release, said Dirk Meyer, AMD's director of engineering for K7.

 

IDT continues to stress value in processor roadmap

By Will Wade

October 13, 1998
Semiconductor Business News

It's been a long year for Glenn Henry, president of Integrated Device Technology Inc.'s Centaur Technology division and the driving force behind its line of WinChip microprocessors. Henry introduced the product last year at the Microprocessor Forum, and he spoke at the event again this morning to recap the company's moderate performance.

"I'm glad to be speaking here today because it means we're still in business," he said. Although more than 500,000 units have shipped to date, IDT has been forced to revise its WinChip roadmap in recent months, and it is unclear how successful the company will be as it pursues its strategy that emphasized value over performance.

 

Cyrix Jumps Intel’s Interface For New Chip

By Mark Hachman

October 14, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

National Semiconductor's Cyrix will not apparently adopt the "slot" interface used by competitor Intel's Pentium II microprocessor, according to an industry analyst.

Michael Slater, president of MicroDesign Resources, in Sebastopol, Calif., said Cyrix's third-generation microprocessor, code-named Cayenne, will adopt the Socket 7 interface when it ships in 1999. Cyrix and National officials were not available for comment.

 

Cyrix spices up PC with Jalapeno

By Mark Hachman

October 14, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

National Semiconductor Corp.'s chief executive Brian Halla at the Microprocessor Forum in San Jose yesterday outlined Cyrix Corp.'s roadmap, which shows the introduction next year of a MediaPC microprocessor running at 233 to 300 MHz for the ultra-low-cost PC market.

Cyrix's MediaPC is a low-cost system-on-a-chip, which integrates a microprocessor, video decompression engine, 2D graphics, and associated peripheral logic, aimed at an evolving sector of the PC market that Halla expects will be priced “free.” [See story National's Halla predicts PCs will be free within a year]

 

Cyrix adopts RDRAM interface for M3 chips

By Mark Hachman

October 14, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

Cyrix Corp., a subsidiary of National Semiconductor Corp., will join the ranks of PC microprocessor makers to license Rambus Inc.'s memory interface, National executives said.

“No, we haven't announced that, but we've got an agreement to license Rambus," said Stan Swearingen, vice president of desktop products for Cyrix, Richardson, Texas. "It was practically a given that we would.”

 

Cyrix, IDT/Centaur, Rise ready low-end PC processors

By Tony Smith

October 13, 1998
The Register

Pretenders to Intel's low-end crown Cyrix, IDT/Centaur and Rise all announced next generation Basic PC-oriented x86-compatible processors at the Microprocessor Forum in San Jose, California today.

Cyrix's product is M3, the first chip based on its new Jalapeno x86 core. According to project manager Greg Grohoski, the design focus was on increasing the bandwidth of the host PC's memory bus, rather than attempt to allow ever more program instructions to be processed simultaneously, the approach taken by Intel and by AMD for K7.

 

Rise launches Intel-compatible chip

By Dominique Deckmyn

October 14, 1998
VNU-Net

Rise Technology officially joined the ranks of Intel, Advanced Micro Devices, Cyrix and IDT on Tuesday when it launched its first x86-compatible chip at the Microprocessor Forum in San Jose.

The company was founded in 1993 and is headquartered in Santa Clara, Intel's home town. Like IDT - another recent entry into the CPU market - Rise is targetting its products mainly at the price sensitive low-end of the PC sector - the area where Intel is considered most vulnerable.

 

Microprocessor Forum: Halla predicts PCs will be free within a year

By Mark Hachman

October 14, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

As the opening act for introductions of the latest, fastest, and most expensive microprocessors at the Microprocessor Forum in San Jose this week, National Semiconductor Corp.'s chief executive Brian Halla calmly predicted that the PC will be free in a year's time.

Halla presented the concept of a “Free PC” as part of his ongoing belief that the major components of a PC can and will be combined onto a single chip. Halla's keynote address set the stage for new chip introductions from National's Cyrix Corp. subsidiary, Advanced Micro Devices Inc., Centaur Technology Inc., a subsidiary of Integrated Device Technology Inc., as well as newcomer Rise Technology.

 
October 13, 1998

AMD unveils K7 chip design

By Michael Kanellos

October 13, 1998
C/Net

Advanced Micro Devices provided details surrounding its next generation microprocessor, the K7, today at the Microprocessor Forum in San Jose, California, while Intel and National Semiconductor also unveiled chip designs.

Among other features, the K7 will run at 500 MHz and higher and use a new technology for the "system bus," a critical data conduit which allows the processor to talk to other components in the computer.

 

AMD, Intel let K7 and Katmai off the leash

By John Lettice

October 13, 1998
The Register

In San Jose today Intel and AMD will set out their rival stalls for next year’s Katmai versus K7 needle match, with AMD taking the offensive for the first time in many a year. So far this year AMD has managed to carve out a better share for itself at the low end of the market, but it’s now tooling-up for an assault further up the PC food chain, and with the K7 is planning a spring offensive which it feels could at last pull it ahead of Intel.

The new K7 will be out in the first half of 1998, and will run initially at speeds in excess of 500 MHz. AMD will be pushing 3D graphics capabilities heavily, and will be supporting Direct Rambus memory technology with the chip. Intel’s counter will be the Tanner chip using the new Katmai instruction set.

 

Rise unveils MP6 processor to challenge Intel

By Craig Matsumoto

October 13, 1998
EE Times

Rise Technology Co., the latest microprocessor hopeful to take on Intel Corp., unveiled details of its X86 architecture, nearly five years in the making, today (Oct. 13) at the Microprocessor Forum.

David T. Lin, chairman and chief executive officer of Rise (Santa Clara, Calif.), introduced his company's MP6 superscalar processor and outlined plans to tackle the relatively young “base PC” market for sub-$1,000 PCs and notebooks.

See Today's Related Stories

Start-up Rise guards details about x86-compatible MPU

By Mark Hachman

October 13, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

Rise Technology Co. will not stray from its stealthy approach into the PC microprocessor marketplace, even at an industry forum known for revelatory glimpses into a company's future.

One of the most awaited presentations at today's Microprocessor Forum here will be the introduction of the mP6, Rise's new low-power microprocessor for both the desktop and notebook PC market. But Rise has picked its customers, and will not be disclosing any product specifics except to those OEMs, according to company executives.

While Rise executives avoided the metrics of price and clock speed, they did say that Rise will produce two chips: the mP6, slated for a general release this quarter, and the mP6 II, a similar chip with 256 kilobytes of level 2 cache memory integrated directly onto the processor die. The mP6 II will be released in the first quarter of 1999.

 

National's processor core pushes integration

By Will Wade

October 13, 1998
Semiconductor Business News

National Semiconductor Corp.'s upcoming Jalapeno processor core will be a showcase for company president and CEO Brian Halla's vision of a fully-integrated system-on-chip design.

Halla restated his long-held goal of a single-chip PC this morning during the keynote address at Microprocessor Forum 98 here, and company executives later disclosed that the next-generation microprocessor will feature a larger Level 2 cache, as well as integrated graphics and memory controllers.

The Jalapeno is scheduled to be included within the M3 processor, which may sample by the end of 1999. The microprocessor will initially be manufactured using 0.18-micron process technology, and initial clock speeds will be 600 to 800 megahertz. Greg Grohoski, M3 project manager, said the new design emphasizes improving speed and performance by reducing memory latency time. "This architecture is scaleable to more than 1 gigahertz," he said.

 

Cyrix opts against Intel’s ‘slot’ interface for new chip

By Mark Hachman

October 13, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

National Semiconductor's Cyrix Corp. will not apparently adopt the "slot" interface used by competitor Intel Corp.'s Pentium II microprocessor, according to an industry analyst.

Michael Slater, president of MicroDesign Resources, Sebastopol, Calif. said that Cyrix's third-generation microprocessor, code-named Cayenne, will adopt the Socket 7 interface when it ships in 1999. Cyrix and National officials were not available for comment.

Currently, Cyrix's "M II" microprocessors use the "Socket 7" interface, a microprocessor bus structure and connector used by Intel's now-discontinued Pentium processor.

 

HP describes plans for first IA-64 chip set

By Lisa DiCarlo

October 13, 1998
PC Week Online

Hewlett-Packard Co. on Monday offered a glimpse of what it says will be the world's first IA-64 chip set and bus.

At a gathering at its historic HP Labs here, the disclosure was made just outside the original offices of Bill Hewlett and David Packard, which have been left untouched since the pair occupied them in the 1950s.

Beginning sometime next year, HP will begin shipping PA-RISC and Intel Corp.-based systems with a motherboard that will also be used in Merced-based systems when the chip is available in mid-2000.

 

AMD K7 Chip Sets Will Support Direct Rambus Memory

By Amber Howle

October 12, 1998
Computer Reseller News

Advanced Micro Devices on Thursday unveiled plans to develop chip sets supporting Direct Rambus memory for its K7 microprocessor.

The Sunnyvale, Calif.-based integrated circuit supplier will do its own development by licensing the Direct Rambus interface technology developed by Rambus in conjunction with Intel. In the past, third parties supplied chip sets for AMD's (company profile) processors.

Direct Rambus technology is expected to enable thelevel of performance to date: 1.6 Gigabytes per second of peak bandwidth from a single device. DRAM industry's highest

 

Intel's days numbered as primary supplier of Alpha?

By Lisa DiCarlo

October 12, 1998
PC Week Online

Over the next few quarters, Intel Corp. will have less to do with producing one of its biggest competitors, the Alpha chip.

That's because Compaq Computer Corp., which now owns Alpha, is looking to IBM Microelectronics and Samsung Electric Co. Ltd. to be the primary suppliers of the processor.

"We're talking quite seriously about IBM and others being our primary alternative suppliers,'' said Jesse Lipcon, senior vice president of the high-performance server division at Compaq and a former Digital Equipment Corp. executive.

 

AMD scores major supply deal with HP

By John Lettice

October 13, 1998
The Register

AMD has scored a sweet deal as icing on the cake of today's K7 unveiling - the company is to supply the CPU for HP's entry to the Windows-Based Terminal market.

According to an HP spokeswoman the CPU is an AMD 486, and as the company says it plans "to establish a premier position around the world in thin-client computing," the volumes for AMD should be significant. A certain piquancy is also added because HP recently announced it had taken out an ARM licence, and would use the chip as a strategic platform for a range of devices, including handhelds and peripherals.

 

IBM advances chip speeds

By Stephen Shankland

October 12, 1998
C/Net

Cell phones and other wireless communication equipment could become more powerful but less power-hungry, thanks to a new chip technology IBM announced today.

The arcane technology improves a chip's conducting efficiency. IBM's silicon germanium technology embeds germanium atoms in certain locations in the silicon crystal that forms the base of microchips. Infused with germanium, the silicon substrate becomes a better conductor of electricity.

 
Today's Related Stories

Rise unleashes CPU for Basic PC, sub-$1,000 notebook

By John Lettice

October 13, 1998
The Register

Rise Technology has unveiled its mP6 line of processors, low-cost x86 compatibles aimed at the sub-$700 desktop and sub-$1,000 notebook markets. In a release timed at 5.17am by the California clock, the company claimed to have already demonstrated "a number of Windows-based multimedia applications" running on the chip to the adoring attendees of the Microprocessor Forum today. Workaholics? We got 'em, evidently...

The mP6 is low power consumption, and is aimed at what Intel refers to as the 'Basic PC' market - interactive education, entertainment, digital imaging and other consumer-oriented applications, says Rise.

 
October 12, 1998

Intel thrives, LSI looks to layoffs

By Michael Kanellos

October 12, 1998
C/Net

A good news/bad news scenario will likely play itself out this week in earnings announcements from semiconductor companies.

On the positive side, Intel is expected to report revenues in excess of the projections the company released last month, according to some analysts. Accordingly, the company is expected to report earnings of 80 cents a share or more. Intel reports tomorrow.

 

Chaotic PC market shapes processor road maps

By Craig Matsumoto with additional reporting by David Lammers

October 10, 1998
EE Times

The Microprocessor Forum will kick off Tuesday (Oct.13) with a look across a landscape that's become terra incognita. The personal computer industry, long seen as a steady line of incrementally more powerful Intel X86 processors, marching — more or less unaccompanied — toward the horizon, has devolved into chaos. With its once monolithic market fractured, Intel Corp. is no longer in control. Competitors of every stripe, from historic archrival AMD to completely new ventures, are sinking their roots into a niche or two, hoping to outmaneuver the Santa Clara, Calif., giant.

In high-end servers, increasingly a multiprocessing market, Intel will hand out a few more hints on IA-64: its Merced and McKinley processors. But Advanced Micro Devices Inc. will counter with a first look at the Alpha-bused, giant-cached K7 CPU. And in perhaps the unkindest cut of all, stalwart Intel customer Compaq Computer Corp. will unveil its plans for a new, full-blown Alpha implementation, the 21364.

 

AMD gets Rambus memory help

By Stephen Shankland

October 9, 1998
C/Net

Advanced Micro Devices has licensed Direct Rambus, a high-performance computer memory technology developed by Rambus.

Direct Rambus enables a processor to communicate with memory chips at speeds up to 1.6 gigabytes per second. By comparison, conventional memory technology in today's high-end PCs allow a peak bandwidth of 800 megabits per second, half the Rambus speed, said Subodh Toprani, vice president of marketing at Rambus.

 

Cost, availability could slow adoption of Direct RDRAM

By Andrew MacLellan

October 12, 1998
Electronic Buyers' News

With chip makers releasing their first Direct Rambus DRAM engineering samples, early industry cost estimates indicate that the emerging architecture is ... expensive.

Not prohibitively expensive, but costly enough to slightly retard the Direct RDRAM adoption track proposed by the technology's chief backers-Intel Corp. and Rambus Inc. Further blurring the market picture is the chip industry's ability to manufacture enough Direct RDRAM to meet the PC market's needs in 1999, according to one market research firm.

Six vendors are currently shipping 64-Mbit Direct RDRAM engineering samples, with prices from the likes of Mitsubishi Electronics America Inc. and LG Semicon Co. Ltd. set at $45 each. While sample prices are typically several times those of volume tags, an initial cost projection from leading DRAM vendors reveals that 64-Mbit chips will carry a 15% to 30% premium in OEM quantities.

 

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