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To: DiViT who wrote (35985)9/16/1998 3:16:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Intel Katmai. They are adding hardware so they can do it in software. MPEG-2 encoding. Click on the link for a diagram.
eet.com

Katmai details lead Intel's push to high-end PCs

By Rick Boyd-Merritt and David Lammers

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. - In an effort to drive PCs forward, Intel Corp.
rolled out new details about multimedia instruction-set extensions for its
upcoming Katmai processor as the vanguard of a small army of new
technologies, products and specifications it marshaled at the company's
developer's forum here.

Despite the well-orchestrated barrage, debate was still sharp on the
question of whether sluggish PC demand - especially at the high end -
will rebound in the near future.

The Katmai New Instructions (KNI) consist of 70 instructions and eight
new 128-bit registers Intel has added to its X86 architecture. The registers
open the way to executing four, 32-bit single-precision SIMD floating-point
operations simultaneously with Intel's existing MMX integer instructions
extensions.

While Intel has provided some details of KNI before, the enhancements
were initially couched as ways to accelerate 3-D graphics processing.
Enhancements disclosed this week, however, indicate KNI should be able
to serve a broad range of applications.

At the Intel Developer Forum, Intel detailed enhancements to the Pentium II
processor bus that will be able to handle as many as eight outstanding
transaction requests or responses at a time. A new multimedia streaming
architecture will further enhance the processor's bandwidth and reduce
latency by eliminating the need for caching in streaming operations, opening
the door to overlapping fetch, execute and store operations. "The
streaming-data capabilities could be more important than KNI itself,"
said
Martin Reynolds, a vice president at market-research company Dataquest
Inc. (San Jose, Calif.).

In addition, KNI includes specific instructions aimed at improving
continuous-voice recognition and MPEG-2 encoding. Voice-recognition
applications could see improvements of greater than 20 percent in accuracy
or response time, thanks to some of the new instructions, said Shreekant
(Ticky) Thakkar, principal processor architect on Katmai. New instructions
for MPEG-2 encoding could collapse 24 tasks into 10, providing a 40
percent improvement in speed, he said.

"We would hope to get a broad spectrum of applications taking advantage
of this by early next year, when we launch Katmai," said Albert Yu, general
manager of Intel's microprocessor products group.
"That's the biggest
challenge - getting the apps out there."

Indeed, at least one senior PC engineer said he feared Intel will not deliver
enough compelling applications for the Katmai systems that he will ship next
spring at prices around $2,500. "The high-end market is shrinking and users
need new apps to see the benefits," he said.

Peter Glaskowsky, a senior analyst with the Microprocessor Report
(Sunnyvale, Calif.), expressed similar concerns, noting that Intel's KNI
demos at the Developer Forum were unimpressive and failed to show
MPEG-2 capabilities.
"The digital video stuff will be there, but whether the
3-D stuff will be ready is unclear to me," he added.

Graphics-market researcher Jon Peddie of Jon Peddie Associates (Tiburon,
Calif.) said Intel has spent tens of millions of dollars assisting software
developers who plan to write applications that make use of KNI.
Nevertheless, he said "in the home market it will be all Intel can do to hold
even next year."

"There's a segment of the market that does buy up, but it's more difficult to
keep them doing that each year," echoed Reynolds of Dataquest, noting that
the United States is increasingly becoming a saturated market for PCs.

"We are seeing the average selling prices of PCs drop dramatically. The
story isn't in the growth of the sub-$1,000 PC, but it's in the fact that the
high-end systems' prices have collapsed to about $2,000," he added.

In a bow to that trend, Intel cut prices of some top-end processors 29
percent the day before the conference opened.

In an effort to fight collapsing PC prices, Craig Barrett, Intel president and
chief executive officer, in his keynote address sketched out plans for as
many as 10 new processors the company will launch next year to fit niches
from high-end servers to set-top boxes. "This will be the most intense new
product rollout we've had in some time," Barrett said.

The new chips include as many as eight varieties of the Pentium II, including
Intel's first processors made in 0.18-micron technology and slated to ship in
the second half with speeds well above 500 MHz and integrated L2 caches
of up to 2 Mbytes in some cases. At the low end Intel plans to roll out in the
second half of next year its first updates of the StrongARM 1100 and 1500
chips acquired from Digital Equipment Corp., aimed at embedded
applications in network peripherals, set-top boxes and handheld PCs. "We
don't consider the StrongARM a competitor to the Intel architecture, but a
complement to it," Barrett said.

In addition to the new products, Barrett detailed initiatives to make PCs
more secure and easier to use. They include plans to ship flash BIOS chips
with embedded security primitives, such as random-number generators,
working under a new Common Data Security Architecture. Barrett also
reiterated Intel's work in areas such as removing legacy PC technologies
such as the ISA bus and enhancing new high-bandwidth PC connections via
satellite, digital subscriber lines and digital TV.

In separate presentations, Intel managers ran out a laundry list of agendas
that spanned everything from specifications for new distributed 48-V
power-supply subsystems for servers to incorporating new interfaces like
1394 in desktop and notebook computers.

"The biggest challenge is just coping with all the specifications and changes,"
said one senior engineer with a large PC maker. "If I can bring my EEs up
to speed one month before Hewlett-Packard, I have a huge advantage. The
challenge is how to manage all this information."



To: DiViT who wrote (35985)9/16/1998 4:09:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
Blackbird's board has too many componets, and there is a slot for a daughter card. Click the link. They are also trying to get game developers to author for the platform........

next-generation.com

Blackbird Swingin' in the Console Fight

Next Generation Online learns more about Motorola's set-top box technology in an interview with one of the electronics giant's VPs.

September 15, 1998


We had an opportunity to discuss Motorola's new set-top box architecture, code-named "Blackbird" with Motorola's VP and Assistant General Manager of the Consumer Systems Group, Ray Burgess.
In yesterday's announcement of the technology, Motorola described a new architecture which would be an all-purpose entertainment center. With input from DVD, phone lines, internet, and Cable TV, it could connect your stereo, your television and (brace for the marketing speak) your world. Using VM Labs' Project X technology, it could be a high-end gaming device for the home, running any game developed for the Project X platform but with 8-16 meg of RAM.

Mr. Burgess explains that the goal on Motorola's part is not to wade into the retail market with a Motorola all-purpose box. What they have done is create a complete system architecture with software for the integration of its PowerPC chip, which uses MicroWare's David Real-Time Operating System and the Project X chip which uses a proprietary Media Kernal and 2D and 3D APIs. In addition they've integrated a Java Virtual machine and provided for the "seamless" switching between all three systems in one board. This device will control

Motorola will sell this architecture in three ways:

First, as Mr. Burgess describes it, in the ala carte mode -- with electronics companies being able to buy just the chips, the chips and the board, the chips and the software, etc.
Second, they will sell a complete board and software. This is for electronics companies that want to put the system in TVs or build their own box, adding bits and pieces. For instance, a company that manufactures DVD players might buy the board to create a DVD set-top box that also offers Web Access. Or a TV maker might buy the board and forego the DVD and just add video telephony and internet access to its televisions.
Third, a company can buy a complete non-branded box from Motorola which they can then install in, say, hotel rooms across the country.
Primary uses for this kind of technology right now are things like hotel rooms. There are companies that will buy set-top boxes from Motorola, and sell them and the service of installing them to a hotel chain.

However, there are obvious gaming applications available. The Blackbird can take any number of input devices, and Mr. Burgess explained that Motorola worked with major peripheral manufacturers to make sure the architecture is compatible with "every standard." That includes USB. In addition to all this, the device is designed for an IR keyboard and an IR remote control.

The issue now, with this architecture now being sold to any electronics company interested in producing set-top boxes and uninterested in creating the architecture themselves, is content. Who's going to develop it and when will it come out. VM Labs, the folks that make Project X, have been pretty quiet on the issue. But recently, Motorola put a want ad in Game Developer magazine.

We asked Mr. Burgess if Motorola is planning to publish content for the Blackbird, using the Project X system. "It is not my intention to have a division in Motorola that rivals EA," he responded. More specifically, he explained that they would like to see the development of gaming content accellerated for the platform, and that they will have people at Motorola who understand games to help developers make their titles come to fruition.

Mr. Burgess went on to explain that Motorola and VM Labs have spoken to 20-25 "top developers," all of whom are enticed by the profit model for Project X titles. "It's no giant secret that most game developers are not exactly overjoyed with the business model afforded them by Nintendo and Sony." Developing for Project X (and by association the Blackbird) would allow developers to "keep more revenue stream from games." However, without any major pubisher announcing big titles for Project X, we'll believe it when we see it. (Unfortunately, a representative from VM Labs was not available at press time.)

There's also the issue of getting this potential gaming machine into the market. While the set-top box is fairly common in hotels and from Cable TV companies (though those are hardly multi-function devices), there is not yet a retail demand for them. However, with the Blackbird technology, Mr. Burgess assures us that companies are looking at bringing the set-top box to retail.

However, Mr. Burgess is clear that gaming is not the core of Motorola's strategy with the Blackbird. "Blackbird will be successful despite gaming. If that's one of the legs of the stool that falls off on the way, we'll be fine."