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Politics : RAMTRONIAN's Cache Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gammaray who wrote (5390)5/6/1998 10:40:00 PM
From: Gutterball  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 14464
 
Speaking of earnings, I'd like to have some fun and have others weigh in with their EPS expectations for 1Q98. Tomorrow night, we'll know the answer. The winner earns the title of "venerable" for the next week.

Say 0|O comes closest, then everybody who addresses him must say, the venerable 0|0, etc. In the event of a tie, both wear the title.

I'm already on the record for -0.12. So how about it folks! Have at it.



To: gammaray who wrote (5390)5/7/1998 12:40:00 AM
From: PZTee  Respond to of 14464
 
Check this out. Sure looks like a good opportunity for ESDRAMs.

Motorola to unveil new PowerPC
design
By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
May 6, 1998, 4:00 a.m. PT

Tomorrow, Motorola will formally unveil new technology for
boosting the performance of PowerPC chips, taking the
venerable chip architecture in new directions.

Motorola will add what is partly an answer to Intel's much-hyped
MMX multimedia instruction set. The "AltiVec" technology will
be incorporated in some commercial PowerPC chips starting in
late 1998, according to the company.

But the technology also goes far beyond MMX, addressing a
range of markets that MMX doesn't such as networking and
telephony. Interestingly, the chip is being rolled out at
Networld+Interop which is primarily a networking conference.

AltiVec adds fatter pipes and a "data engine" inside the chip for
manipulating large quantities of data. Potential applications
include speech processing and networking routers, which
manage Internet traffic.

"This is really a big ray of hope for the PowerPC people. The
perception is that the PowerPC is fading with the Mac, and that
their number is up, but that's not really case," said Jim Turley,
senior analyst with MicroDesign Resources. "They are
succeeding, but not in the glamorous, high profile places people
hear about," he added.

Apple Computer, which took part in the development of the
technology, is expected by analysts to eventually use the new
technology in its Macintosh computers to aid in image and video
processing. Apple could detail its use of the technology as soon
as its developer conference later this month.

Apple could not be reached for comment.

Other chips such as Sun Microsystem's Sparc and Digital's
Alpha already have similar technologies, analysts note. Intel's
MMX technology is perhaps the most widely known because of
that company's marketing efforts.

"AltiVec can gobble a lot more data at a time than any others,"
Turley said, comparing its potential favorably with Intel's MMX.
"Particularly crippled is MMX because they grafted [multimedia
extensions] onto a processor never meant for it."

AltiVec is two new technologies, one hardware, the other
software. On the hardware side, it adds a new "execution unit"
inside the PowerPC processor that is built to efficiently process
certain kinds of data. All mainstream processors already come
with execution units call "integer" and "floating point" designed
to efficiently process other kinds of data.

The new "vector unit" operates concurrently with the existing
floating point and integer units found in typical desktop PC
processors.

On the software side, the chip will be able to use a total of 162
new instructions for manipulating data. This is of critical
importance but with one major catch: Developers must write
programs that use the instructions, and changes need to be made
to the operating system to accommodate the instructions, said
Turley.

In stark technical terms, PowerPC chips with this technology will
be able to process 16 times the number of data "chunks" for each
clock cycle compared to previous designs.

"Think of the chip as having a doorway in and out of the chip
that's 32 bits wide, but the hallways are 128 bits wide," Turley
offers. "Once data is moved out of [main memory] and into the
chip, they can really swing lots of data around and do special
number crunching, more so than other chips."

For instance, a single chip with AltiVec technology could run 30
28.8kbps modems in a remote access server (the kind a Internet
service provider uses). This compares to a high-performance
digital signal processor (DSP), which can run 8 modems, says
Will Swearingen, product marketing manager for Motorola.

Motorola said the chip will initially be targeted at high-end
networking and desktop computing applications, but will later
find its way into lower-cost designs. The chip will be produced
in sample quantities during the second half of 1998, with volume
production slated for the first half of 1999.