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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: RDM who wrote (47888)1/30/1999 2:31:00 AM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (2) of 1571120
 
Thanks for your extensive thoughts on Alpha and the server market. Here are some comments of my own ...

<Personally I wonder about the prospects for the Intel Merced and successors. The Intel 64 bit chips may not be the fastest X86 processors when they arrive.>

Actually, the Merced will most probably be the fastest x86 processors out there, mainly because Willamette is being released about six months after Merced. It is unknown whether Foster (derivative of Willamette for servers) will be faster at x86 apps than Merced, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was.

<One million chips per year may be a lot for this market. Even at $2,000 per chip the early 64 bit CPU market may not be a big growth market for either AMD or Intel.>

With all this talk over the impact of Merced and that blasted six-month delay (you can tell I'm not happy over the Merced delay), the fact is that Merced is going to such a low volume market compared to Pentium or K6/K7.

<Probably AMD wants the K8 to extend the addressing of the K7. Perhaps the Alpha people and patents may help with this.>

Actually, I don't think extended addressing is that hard to achieve. It was done for Xeon without too much trouble (I think), and it can't be too hard to come out with a K7-derivative that has extended addressing.

<I my opinion the Alpha is an awesome chip and a real contender for being one of the most powerful processors on the planet. Does it make sense for a mass production chip maker to produce it? That depends upon lots of things, including the price.>

We'll see. Alpha's biggest threat is Merced and McKinley, but of course, it isn't here yet.

Tenchusatsu
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