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To: Scumbria who wrote (128816)3/2/2001 11:49:11 AM
From: Joseph Pareti  Respond to of 186894
 
McKinley + direct hit to Transmeta
THIS IS THE REAL CLOWN FREE STUFF
-----------------------
MCKINLEY" SET TO STAR AT INTEL CONFERENCE 03.02.01
COMMERCIAL NEWS HPCwire
==============================================================================

Michael Kanellos reported for CNET News.com: Intel Corporation has completed
the design of its "McKinley" processor for servers, according to sources -- a
manufacturing milestone that will likely be one of the highlights of the Intel
Developer Forum next week.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker has "taped out," or completed, the
blueprint on McKinley, a code name for a 64-bit processor for high-end
servers, according to sources close to the company. Intel has also managed to
run some software on the existing samples.

Although McKinley won't appear in servers until 2002, the news that the design
is finished will likely be one of the focal points of the Intel Developer
Forum, a three-day conference on all things Intel, starting Tuesday in San
Jose, Calif.

Among other highlights, Intel and executives from BeComm, which makes media
applications for Internet appliances, will show off a prototype of an
Intel-branded Web-surfing pad. Intel will also likely update the Pentium 4
road map and discuss plans to better couple Pentium 4 computers with double
data rate DRAM.

In a direct swipe at rival Transmeta Corporation, Intel will also introduce
proposals for a new benchmark testing system for comparing energy-efficient
notebook chips, according to the conference agenda.

Server developments, though, will likely take center stage. For years, Intel
has been aggressively trying to come out with a processor that can compete
against expensive and ornate chips like Sun Microsystems Incorporated
UltraSparc III or Compaq Computer's Alpha. These chips process data in 64-bit
chunks, as opposed to most Intel chips, which digest data at a 32-bit rate.

Despite a focus on McKinley, the Itanium chip will actually be Intel's first
member of the IA-64 family. But successive delays, among other factors, have
stripped that chip of much of its potential. Originally due in 1999, the chip
won't be available commercially until May.

However, the majority of server manufacturers aren't designing or
manufacturing their own Itanium servers; most will sell Itanium servers
designed by Intel and said they will wait for McKinley before investing
heavily into IA-64.

"McKinley is really the vehicle that is going to begin the volume ramp for
IA-64," said Nathan Brookwood, principal analyst at Insight 64.

Compaq, for instance, will release a 32-processor server based on McKinley
next year, according to Mary McDowell, general manger of the industry standard
server group at Compaq.

By contrast, Itanium is already relegated to the nostalgia market. Brookwood
recalled one conference where the company trotted out the president of dying
dot-com eToys to extol the virtues of Itanium for its e-commerce needs.

"He was saying how they needed more capacity," Brookwood laughed. "eToys
probably isn't pushing them for delivery anymore."

Along with these two chips, Intel will also likely discuss "Foster," a code
name for a version of the Pentium 4 for servers due out in May. The chip will
be part of the Xeon family.

Memory will likely be another hot topic. Although the Pentium 4 currently
works only with Rambus memory, Intel has already said it will come out with a
"Brookdale" chipset that allows PC makers to couple the chip with DDR DRAM.

The question now is when Brookdale will come out. A DDR version of Brookdale
is slated for the first quarter of 2002. Other companies, though, such as Acer
Labs, are expected to release Pentium 4 chipsets for DDR DRAM this year. Some
industry watchers believe Intel may move up the release date. A panel
discussing the memory road map will take place Tuesday afternoon.

Analysts say the megahertz race, or lack thereof, will also likely be a topic
of conversation. Last year, Intel and rival Advanced Micro Devices were
engaged in a fierce battle to have the fastest chip on the planet. A slowdown
in PC demand has taken some of the fire out of the race. Ultimately, this
could slow the pace of chip acceleration.

"The market is so soft right now that no one is asking for a refresh of
components," said Dean McCarron, principal analyst at Mercury Research.

As it did at the last conference, Intel will use the event to promote
peer-to-peer computing. Andrew Chien, one of the founders of Entropia, one of
the leading P2P start-ups, will speak on Wednesday.

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