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To: muzosi who wrote (147478)11/12/2001 5:18:58 AM
From: Joseph Pareti  Respond to of 186894
 
INTEL'S NEXT PENTIUM 4 COULD HIT 3 GHZ

contrast this with the smoke around Thoroughbred, e.g. who is supposed to fab it, to what extent, and at what stage it is.

==============================================

INTEL'S NEXT PENTIUM 4 COULD HIT 3 GHZ 11.09.01
COMMERCIAL NEWS HPCwire
==============================================================================

Dan Neel reported for InfoWorld.com: Intel will demonstrate the first
0.13-micron Pentium 4 processors at the upcoming Comdex computer industry
trade show in Las Vegas, according to sources familiar with the chip maker's
plans.

Intel will also introduce a new category of 0.13-micron Pentium III chips with
an "S" designation, standing for "server" chip. Intel will demonstrate the new
Pentium III-S chips running in ultra-dense server racks known as server
blades.

The 0.13-micron Pentium 4 lays the groundwork for the Pentium 4 chip family to
attain speeds as high as 3 GHz by the end of next year. Originally scheduled
for launch in December, Intel recently moved the debut of the 0.13-micron
Pentium 4 chip back to January, sources said.

The new Pentium III-S chips put even more pressure on a struggling Transmeta,
whose Crusoe chip was also targeted at the server blade market, as well as
mobile devices.

The arrival of 0.13-micron Pentium 4 chips completes Intel's transition to the
smaller transistor interconnect architecture from the 0.18-micron architecture
of current Pentium 4 chips. The 0.13-micron Pentium III product line, formerly
code-named Tualatin, has existed for some time as Intel's Pentium III-M
(mobile) chips. Pentium III-S chips are a server-centric application of the
same design.

Smaller micron architectures yield faster internal clock speeds, lower power
consumption, and cooler operating temperatures. Aiming a flavor of the
0.13-micron Pentium III chips at the ultra-dense server blade market was a
logical step for Intel.

Sprucing Up Servers Server blades are a new breed of ultra-dense server that
sports a revolutionary vertical design that lends itself nicely to low-power,
low-heat operation while allowing users to fit hundreds of server blades in a
standard rack. Early entrants into the server blade market, including RLX
Technologies, Racemi, and Compaq, have courted mobile chips such as
Transmeta's Crusoe processor and Intel's Pentium III-M chips to achieve
low-heat, high-density operation.

With the Pentium III-S chip, server blade companies will have a processor
specifically designed for blade environments

"Tualatin is a dynamite server chip," said Nathan Brookwood, the principal
analyst with Insight 64, headquartered in Saratoga, California. "One of the
reasons [Intel] decided not to go forward with the Foster-based Xeon chip was
because Tualatin, with its larger cache, had better performance in server
environments."

With the Pentium III-S, Intel has basically taken its mobile Pentium III-M
chip and re-targeted it at the server market for companies that were building
or considering building Transmeta-based server blades.

Intel already has a dual-processor 0.13-micron Pentium III in its arsenal,
which stands to put further pressure on Transmeta, sources said.

Sales of Transmeta's Crusoe chips have taken a "significant downturn"
according to Dean McCarron, an industry analyst with Mercury Research in
Scottsdale, Arizona.

McCarron does not expect Transmeta to be able to return fire against Intel in
the server blade chip arena until the arrival of Transmeta's Crusoe 5800
processor, an upgrade from the company's current 5600 chip that should arrive
in mid-2002.



To: muzosi who wrote (147478)11/12/2001 9:17:59 AM
From: Elmer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
do you think xilinx or nvidia are getting that shitty support/service from tsmc?

In general yes, however the term "shitty" is yours not mine. They may think the service is good.

EP