PC Review
Forums
Newsgroups
Hardware
Processors
Intel COO signals willingness to go with AMD64!!
Forums
Newsgroups
Hardware
Processors
Intel COO signals willingness to go with AMD64!!
![]() |
Intel COO signals willingness to go with AMD64!! |
|
|
Thread Tools | Rate Thread |
|
|
#1 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 02:04:13 GMT, "Yousuf Khan"
<ABCbbbl67DEF@GHIyahooJKL.MNOcomPQR> wrote: >http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040128/tech_intel_64bit_1.html > Nothing new here except the words of an analyst: "Otellini's comments now suggest that Intel intends to release a desktop chip similar to and compatible with AMD's 64-bit offering, Brookwood said." Far as I can tell, Otellini said not a word about compatibility. Maybe, maybe not. Either the Reuters correspondent wrote a lousy article, putting the important words into the mouth of someone who doesn't count, it was edited badly, or Brookwood drew an unwarranted conclusion. RM |
|
|
|
#3 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
>Far as I can tell, Otellini said not a word about compatibility.
>Maybe, maybe not. Either the Reuters correspondent wrote a lousy >article, putting the important words into the mouth of someone who >doesn't count, it was edited badly, or Brookwood drew an unwarranted >conclusion. IMO, an Intel-branded 64-bit X86 (whether fully-campatible with AMD's 64-bit X86 or not) is more realistic than an average-joe desktop version of IA64. By the time of the 2008 presidential primaries (which is a long time in the tech world) IA64 will probably still be stuck in the high-end server/workstation segment. So much for Intel's grand vision for IA64 as an successor to X86 Intel just doesn'twant to admit that they'd been beaten by AMD as far as general widespread acceptable of a 64-bit capable platform. And it would take a long time for Intel to catch up with then if they wish to go the IA64 route. So Intel cowers in muted secrecy on what 64-bit X86 support they may be working on. |
|
|
|
#4 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 23:15:00 -0600, lyon_wonder
<lyon_wonder@yahoo.com> wrote: > >IMO, an Intel-branded 64-bit X86 (whether fully-campatible with AMD's >64-bit X86 or not) is more realistic than an average-joe desktop >version of IA64. By the time of the 2008 presidential primaries >(which is a long time in the tech world) IA64 will probably still be >stuck in the high-end server/workstation segment. So much for Intel's >grand vision for IA64 as an successor to X86 Intel just doesn't>want to admit that they'd been beaten by AMD as far as general >widespread acceptable of a 64-bit capable platform. And it would take >a long time for Intel to catch up with then if they wish to go the >IA64 route. So Intel cowers in muted secrecy on what 64-bit X86 >support they may be working on. Intel said, when it rolled out the P4, that the technology would scale to 10GHz, so I don't think they had any near-term plans to abandon x86. By the time the P4 *does* reach 10GHz (if, indeed, it makes it), the world of computers is likely to have changed beyond recognition, and I don't think Intel ever had IA64 targeted at desktops. What used to be desktops will be divided into home/office appliances with low-power, low-heat, low-noise chips and workstations, where Xeon, AMD64, Opteron, and Itanium are going to be fighting over a modest-sized market. What has happened that _has_ taken Intel by surprise, is that AMD has successfully invaded a space for corporate servers it thought it owned. They had expected to have that space nailed down with Itanium and Xeon with performance out of reach for AMD. My own read is that IBM's willingness to put the best of its process technology at AMD's disposal tipped the balance of performance in a way that Intel never expected. Intel plainly feels a little pressured, but not so pressured that they have made anything but P4/Xeon easy to buy. Just try to buy an Itanium to put into your SuperMicro board or a Pentium-M to put into your ITX board. Somebody out there beside me must be really interested in what might be possible with Pentium-M if Intel didn't keep such a tight grip on it, and Intel is more eager to keep Itanium from being equated in any way with Opteron than it is to sell them. Just my read. RM |
|
|
|
#5 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
"Yousuf Khan" <ABCbbbl67DEF@GHIyahooJKL.MNOcomPQR> wrote in message news:xSZRb.833$ef.552@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com... > http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040128/tech_intel_64bit_1.html Nothing in the article or elsewhere even remotely suggests that Intel will use AMD64 or anything that is similar to it in any way other than it will run 64-bit software (source code compatability in high-level languages). DS |
|
|
|
#6 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
"David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com> wrote in message
news:bvabie$6bd$1@nntp.webmaster.com... > > "Yousuf Khan" <ABCbbbl67DEF@GHIyahooJKL.MNOcomPQR> wrote in message > news:xSZRb.833$ef.552@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com... > > > > http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040128/tech_intel_64bit_1.html > > > Nothing in the article or elsewhere even remotely suggests that Intel > will use AMD64 or anything that is similar to it in any way other than it > will run 64-bit software (source code compatability in high-level > languages). I think it's one of those reading of the political tea leaves sort of exercises. When Intel says that it's going to have processors ready to take advantage of 64-bit software when that software is ready, the only software that can be ready at that point is AMD64 software. Obviously, source code compatibility hasn't resulted in a lot of cross-platform applications coming out, for example between Itanium or Opteron. Nor between those two and any other 64-bit platform out there. The only sort of compatibility worth having is binary compatibility. Yousuf Khan |
|
|
|
#7 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 01:09:52 -0500, Robert Myers <rmyers@rustuck.com>
wrote: >On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 23:15:00 -0600, lyon_wonder ><lyon_wonder@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> >>IMO, an Intel-branded 64-bit X86 (whether fully-campatible with AMD's >>64-bit X86 or not) is more realistic than an average-joe desktop >>version of IA64. By the time of the 2008 presidential primaries >>(which is a long time in the tech world) IA64 will probably still be >>stuck in the high-end server/workstation segment. So much for Intel's >>grand vision for IA64 as an successor to X86 Intel just doesn't>>want to admit that they'd been beaten by AMD as far as general >>widespread acceptable of a 64-bit capable platform. And it would take >>a long time for Intel to catch up with then if they wish to go the >>IA64 route. So Intel cowers in muted secrecy on what 64-bit X86 >>support they may be working on. > >Intel said, when it rolled out the P4, that the technology would scale >to 10GHz, so I don't think they had any near-term plans to abandon >x86. By the time the P4 *does* reach 10GHz (if, indeed, it makes it), >the world of computers is likely to have changed beyond recognition, >and I don't think Intel ever had IA64 targeted at desktops. Long before P4 came to fruition, there were "road-maps" which showed x86 reduced to a near-zero role - only STBs IIRC - by 2005/2006. Those portrayals are no longer available of course so their provenance is therefore difficult to pin down now but they looked official enough to me and were published on reputable industry sites like E-Insite. It was certainly my interpretation at the time that IA64 was targeted to take over even the desktop market by then and that Intel was the one saying it. > What used >to be desktops will be divided into home/office appliances with >low-power, low-heat, low-noise chips and workstations, where Xeon, >AMD64, Opteron, and Itanium are going to be fighting over a >modest-sized market. > >What has happened that _has_ taken Intel by surprise, is that AMD has >successfully invaded a space for corporate servers it thought it >owned. They had expected to have that space nailed down with Itanium >and Xeon with performance out of reach for AMD. My own read is that >IBM's willingness to put the best of its process technology at AMD's >disposal tipped the balance of performance in a way that Intel never >expected. Yes the AMD servers must be quite a shock to the people at Intel who thought that AMD would never get more than a nibble at the high ASP sector. Mind you I haven't seen any firm reports that corporations are biting on Opteron - AMD *could* do a better job on "visibility". As for IBM's "willingness" an initial (reported) payment of $46million in November '02 to fix Cu?/OI for the Opteron (but not for Barton) was surely a nice incentive.:-) Rgds, George Macdonald "Just because they're paranoid doesn't mean you're not psychotic" - Who, me?? |
|
|
|
#8 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 23:09:19 -0800, "David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com>
wrote: > >"Yousuf Khan" <ABCbbbl67DEF@GHIyahooJKL.MNOcomPQR> wrote in message >news:xSZRb.833$ef.552@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com... > > >> http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040128/tech_intel_64bit_1.html > > > Nothing in the article or elsewhere even remotely suggests that Intel >will use AMD64 or anything that is similar to it in any way other than it >will run 64-bit software (source code compatability in high-level >languages). The article most certainly does suggest that an analyst read things that way. Whether Otellini meant that is another matter - Itanium for the desktop does not "fit" either - an Iteleron??<shrug> Rgds, George Macdonald "Just because they're paranoid doesn't mean you're not psychotic" - Who, me?? |
|
|
|
#9 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
"Yousuf Khan" <ABCbbbl67DEF@GHIyahooJKL.MNOcomPQR> wrote in message news:Z54Sb.2526$ef.1590@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com... > "David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com> wrote in message > news:bvabie$6bd$1@nntp.webmaster.com... >> "Yousuf Khan" <ABCbbbl67DEF@GHIyahooJKL.MNOcomPQR> wrote in message >> news:xSZRb.833$ef.552@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com... >> > http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040128/tech_intel_64bit_1.html >> Nothing in the article or elsewhere even remotely suggests that Intel >> will use AMD64 or anything that is similar to it in any way other than it >> will run 64-bit software (source code compatability in high-level >> languages). > I think it's one of those reading of the political tea leaves sort of > exercises. When Intel says that it's going to have processors ready to > take > advantage of 64-bit software when that software is ready, the only > software > that can be ready at that point is AMD64 software. Umm, no. He means 64-bit windows software. That is, software that can be made to run on a 64-bit windows platform of any kind. He doesn't say anything about binary compatibility and there's no reason to think that's important. > Obviously, source code compatibility hasn't resulted in a lot of > cross-platform applications coming out, for example between Itanium or > Opteron. Nor between those two and any other 64-bit platform out there. > The > only sort of compatibility worth having is binary compatibility. That's because there's no 64-bit software market yet. That's Intel's whole point. DS |
|
|
|
#10 |
|
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
"George Macdonald" <fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote in message news:h0mh101n0qrgbkcuticd6r99nsc6jr3v8n@4ax.com... > On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 23:09:19 -0800, "David Schwartz" > <davids@webmaster.com> > wrote: >>"Yousuf Khan" <ABCbbbl67DEF@GHIyahooJKL.MNOcomPQR> wrote in message >>news:xSZRb.833$ef.552@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com... >>> http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/040128/tech_intel_64bit_1.html >> Nothing in the article or elsewhere even remotely suggests that Intel >>will use AMD64 or anything that is similar to it in any way other than it >>will run 64-bit software (source code compatability in high-level >>languages). > The article most certainly does suggest that an analyst read things that > way. Whether Otellini meant that is another matter - Itanium for the > desktop does not "fit" either - an Iteleron??<shrug> There's no evidence that Intel feels that way. Everyone is free to speculate. DS |
|
![]() |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Rate This Thread | |
|
|

Main Page 

Intel just doesn't
