VOLUME 13, NUMBER 13 OCTOBER 6,1999 REPORT
Power4 Focuses on Memory Bandwidth IBM Confronts IA-64, Says ISA Not Important by Keith Diefendorff Not content to wrap sheet metal around Intel microprocessors for its future server business, IBM is developing a processor it hopes will fend off the IA-64 juggernaut. Speaking at this week’s Microprocessor Forum, chief architect Jim Kahle de-scribed IBM’s monster 170-million-transistor Power4 chip, which boasts two 64-bit 1-GHz five-issue superscalar cores, a triple-level cache hierarchy, a 10-GByte/s main-memory interface, and a 45-GByte/s multiprocessor interface, as Figure 1 shows. Kahle said that IBM will see first silicon on Power4 in 1Q00, and systems will begin shipping in 2H01. company has decided to make a last-gasp effort to retain control of its high-end server silicon by throwing its consid-erable financial and technical weight behind Power4. After investing this much effort in Power4, if IBM fails to deliver a server processor with compelling advantages over the best IA-64 processors, it will be left with little alter-native but to capitulate. If Power4 fails, it will also be a clear indication to Sun, Compaq, and others that are bucking IA-64, that the days of proprietary CPUs are numbered. But IBM intends to resist mightily, and, based on what the com-pany has disclosed about Power4 so far, it may just succeed. |