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Technology Stocks : COMS & the Ghost of USRX w/ other STUFF -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DMaA who wrote (12249)2/2/1998 11:20:00 AM
From: Moonray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
Yes and No.
1) It was the Mac side.
2) The story I posted was not a demo at that time:

Inside TrackFrom PC Magazine, January 20, 1998

By John C. Dvorak

Look for IBM to showcase a PowerPC chip running at
1,100 MHz at an upcoming chip conference. The good
news is that the chip doesn't have to be frozen but can
run at 25 degrees centigrade. It's obvious that over the
next few years, the gigahertz speed will be the target of
all desktop computers. I'm ready.


Didn't IBM demonstrate a 1,000MHz processor recently?

o~~~ O



To: DMaA who wrote (12249)2/4/1998 12:36:00 PM
From: Moonray  Respond to of 22053
 
IBM, Digital to report on new super chips

New York Times

SAN FRANCISCO -- The surging power of the microprocessor chip is
approaching another milestone.

Both IBM and Digital Equipment Corp. will present technical papers
Wednesday at a conference here describing experimental chips that
operate at more than one billion cycles a second -- or three times the
speed of today's most powerful personal-computer chips.

Though the chips will not be commercially available until after the turn
of the century, the race to the so-called gigahertz speed has touched off
a battle for bragging rights between the two computer giants, with each
claiming the title of developer of the world's fastest general-purpose
computing chip.

While the actual announcements will be made in the form of dry
technical papers at the International Solid State Circuits Conference,
scheduled to begin in San Francisco on Wednesday, that did not prevent
Digital Equipment from jumping the gun Monday by issuing a news
release that said it was introducing a new family of chips called the
Alpha 21264 that will break the gigahertz speed barrier -- though not
until 2000.

That notice, two years before the chips are to be available, caused IBM
officials to complain that Digital had decided to jump the gun after it
had learned that IBM was preparing to announce its prototype version
of a partly working version of a 1,000 MHz chip that is running in a
laboratory.

Digital, which agreed last week to be acquired by Compaq Computer
Corp., is racing against IBM, the MIPS unit of Silicon Graphics Inc.
and Sun Microsystems Inc. to stay ahead of the increasingly powerful
Intel Pentium microprocessor chips, which recently reached speeds of
333 MHz.

For its part, Intel, at another technical conference last fall, already
provided word of the chip that it hopes will be the successor to the
Pentium. Designed with researchers the Hewlett-Packard Co., this
chip, called the Merced, is also supposed to be faster than 1,000 MHz.

Of the technological advances to be detailed at the conference this
week, IBM's appears to be more impressive than that of Digital, which
until now has generally been accepted as the industry leader, providing
the fastest commercially available microprocessors.

IBM researchers will announce that they have achieved a working
version of a chip with the core functions of a Power PC
microprocessor operating at 1,000 MHz. The IBM announcement is
particularly striking, computer designers said, because the researchers
have reached the 1,000 MHz mark with consumption of power that
matches that of today's conventional microprocessors.

By contrast, other high-speed microprocessors, such as Digital's Alpha,
draw more power and consequently run much hotter, making it
potentially less practical for consumer applications. The new IBM chip,
which was nicknamed GUTS by the team of 15 IBM engineers that
designed it at an IBM research laboratory in Austin, Texas, draws only
6.3 watts of power, far less than the Alpha chip.

The IBM design feat was achieved by the careful placement of
individual transistors on the chip, thereby painstakingly reducing the
length of the wires that connect the transistors. Longer connections
between components on a chip tend to slow execution speeds and
generate excess heat.

''There are no cooling tricks in our microprocessor,'' said Randy Isaac,
an IBM vice president for systems technology and science. ''This runs
at standard room temperature.''

IBM was able to reach the gigahertz speed without resorting to the use
of copper, an element the company recently discovered will
substantially increase the speed of conventional chips. Mr. Isaac said
that the company would soon merge its layout advance with its material
advances to significantly increase the speed of its commercial
microprocessors.

IBM reached the gigahertz speed mark using a standard semiconductor
process that uses silicon instead of more exotic materials like gallium
arsenide. That is an important endorsement for that technology, which
is used in thousands of different consumer products.

o~~~ O