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To: Elmer who wrote (55258)5/8/1998 12:33:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Elmer - Intel's KATMAI seems to be Way Ahead OF Schedule

Intel will be sampling the Katmai this summer and providing compiler support as well!

Check out this Progress Report!

What do you think developers will do when they discover the Katmai runs CIRCLES around the K6-Me2?

All that AMD hype may go to waste when the developers devote their real efforts for writing software for the Katmai!

Paul

{===========================}
news.com

Katmai prototypes out this
summer
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
May 7, 1998, 6:10 p.m. PT

Software developers will receive prototypes
of "Katmai" processors along with related
software tools this summer, as part of Intel's
effort to get the ball rolling on its next
generation of chip technology.

Intel outlined the Katmai roadmap to
approximately 50
application developers
at the Computer Game
Developers
Conference this week
in Long Beach,
California. The
chipmaker said that
this summer they can expect to receive
demonstration systems running the chips, as
well as a host of tools to speed the writing of
code.

The effort is intended to ensure that
applications which can take advantage of
Katmai will be ready for release when the
chip begins to ship in the first half of 1999.
Katami computers are expected to run at
speeds in the range of 500 MHz and offer
other system-level improvements such as
technology for shuttling data around a
computer.

Katmai is the code name of the next
generation of Pentium II processors for
performance desktops. Besides being faster
than today's Pentium II chips, this generation
will contain 70 additional processor
instructions designed to improve
performance.

The upshot: In certain cases multimedia
applications will get a performance boost
from Katmai. Improvements may be seen in
3D graphics, full-motion video, and speech
recognition, for instance. For customers to
get the benefit of the new instructions,
however, Intel has to get developers to
support them. Hence, the concentrated effort
with developers.

Intel faces an identical challenge with the
current version of its MMX technology. At the
moment, MMX instructions are not widely
supported by software vendors. Motorola will
face the same problem with its new
PowerPC processor technology, dubbed
"AltiVec".

Roughly analogous to Intel's MMX, AltiVec
will be incorporated in commercial PowerPC
chips starting in late 1998. Like Intel,
Motorola must garner support for the
technology in order to fully realize its
potential.

Katmai will debut at 500 MHz and move to
faster speeds, according to Intel's next CEO
Craig Barrett. Katmai will initially use a
100-MHz system bus, but analysts have said
that Intel will likely shift toward a 200-MHz
system bus shortly thereafter so that the new
chips will be able to take advantage of the
faster memory chips based around
technology from Rambus which will start to
come out in numbers around the same time.
The system bus controls the speed at which
the processor and memory communicate.

The Katmai instructions were sent to
developers under non-disclosure
agreements earlier this year, according to an
Intel spokeswoman. While the instructions
are not set in stone, they are mostly
completed.

Intel is an investor in CNET: The Computer
Network.



To: Elmer who wrote (55258)5/8/1998 12:37:00 AM
From: Jim McMannis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Elmer,
RE: "How can you be out of your league if you're middle of the road?"
I didn't think it was Intels policy to be middle of the road in anything. Correct me if I am wrong.
When you are middle of the road you can't get the premium price like Intel gets on the top speed grade CPUS, for example.
Jim