AMD's Aiming For Tech Leadership
BY JAMES DETAR INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
investors.com
No. 2 PC chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD) for years has followed — has had to follow — the technology lead of bigger rival Intel Corp. (INTC) Now, for once, it doesn't have to.
AMD has created a technology that Intel, and everyone else, might have to follow.
"In the past, AMD was not thought of as a technology innovator. That's changed dramatically," said Nathan Brookwood, principal analyst at Insight64 in Saratoga, Calif.
AMD has developed a faster way for chips used in network gear and high-speed computers to "talk" to one another. It's called the HyperTransport bus. Analysts say it looks likely to be an accepted standard.
"We needed a new strategy for high-end PCs and network servers," said Gabriele Sartori, director of technology evangelism for AMD. "HyperTransport is going to be better than anything the industry has seen so far."
A bus is a group of software and circuits that let chips inside a computer talk to each other. A bus also can connect a computer to outside devices, such as keyboards and monitors.
HyperTransport can carry more data than most of today's chip buses, and carry them faster. Perhaps most important, it's available now, whereas its rivals are just coming out.
It's touted as a replacement in high-end gear for the PCI bus Intel unveiled in 1992. That's still the most commonly used bus in all computers.
The New Standard?
Some analysts say HyperTransport likely will become the standard for network gear, including servers, routers and switches, as well as workstations. Using HyperTransport, the devices will be able to transmit data faster.
Adoption of HyperTransport would give AMD a leg up on boosting sales. Though anyone can design HyperTransport into their chips, AMD already has put it into its flagship Athlon processors. As HyperTransport spreads, Athlon sales could rise.
In the late 1990s, AMD and a small Concord, Mass., company called API NetWorks Inc. co-developed the HyperTransport bus.
But the new bus faced a big hurdle: PC makers didn't want it. They didn't want the time and expense it would take to convert from the PCI standard.
That gave rival Intel a chance to catch up. To an extent, it did.
Intel is rolling out a new version of PCI called 3GIO, which stands for third generation input-output. In August, 22 companies pledged to use 3GIO, which Intel said it would release early in 2002.
These companies included Dell Computer Corp. (DELL), Compaq Computer Corp. (CPQ), IBM Corp. (IBM) and Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)
Even AMD has thrown its support behind 3GIO, averting a possible PC standards war with Intel.
But it looks like AMD and Intel will battle in bus standards for high-end computing. Network gear makers need to keep up with the rapidly growing Internet. To do that, many say, they need HyperTransport.
Intel Vice President Louis Burns, though, predicts that yet another new type of bus, called Infiniband, will catch on at the higher end in servers and workstations. Infiniband is a HyperTransport rival developed by seven chip and PC companies, including Intel.
Burns says Infiniband will soon be available. "IBM announced an Infiniband product 30 days ago," he pointed out.
Some companies, such as Sun Microsystems Inc., are hedging their bets. They're in both the Infiniband and HyperTransport groups.
Networking Skills
Expect to see a lot of new Net gear coming out with HyperTransport early this year, says Linley Gwennap of the Linley Group in Mountain View, Calif.
"HyperTransport will be used a lot in networks," Gwennap said. "It's being picked up quickly there. They need it today. And PCI just doesn't supply enough bandwidth."
AMD formed the HyperTransport Technology Consortium in July to push the standard. AMD's Sartori is president.
Some companies using it, or planning to use it, include Sun (SUNW), Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO), Apple Computer Inc. (AAPL) and Nokia Corp. (NOK)
Another sign that HyperTransport could become the dominant high-end bus standard is that other chipmakers are using it. They include Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), Broadcom Corp. (BRCM) and PMC-Sierra Inc. (PMCS)
The HyperTransport code is available to any company that wants to license it for free from the consortium.
At a meeting next week, the HyperTransport consortium will name several new members, says a spokesman. That will bring the total roster to 30.
PMC-Sierra got behind the standard a year ago, says Thomas Riordan, a company vice president. "We've given our input," he said, "and we've been actively promoting it with our customers."
One of those customers is Cisco Systems, the biggest network gear maker. Riordan says PMC-Sierra has been selling chips to Cisco for a decade.
"They asked us to put HyperTransport on our processors" so they could continue to ramp up the speed of their Net gear, Riordan said. |