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To: Paul Engel who wrote (68962)11/22/1998 7:52:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel Investors - Intel Demos Rambus System at Comdex

Intel demonstrated a system running full speed 400 MHz Rambus modules at Comdex. Although not explicit, the article seems to imply that the system used the new CAMINO chip set and the Katmai processor.

Paul

{====================================}
techweb.com

November 23, 1998, Issue: 1036
Section: News

Comdex demo keys start of Rambus shift
David Lammers

Las Vegas - Taking its Rambus program closer to the goal of having
next-generation systems on the market next summer, Intel Corp. booted a
Windows machine based on the Rambus memory architecture last week at
Comdex.

The demo, which ran a game called Forsaken, came as PC makers are knee
deep in testing newly received samples of the processors, chip sets and
memory modules that are expected to drive the new memory architecture
forward.

"This is a platform demonstration with the Rambus channel operating at the full
400-MHz speed," said Pete MacWilliams, a fellow at the Intel Architecture
Labs (Hillsboro, Ore.). "We wanted to show the whole system integration
using the Rambus technology-a full motherboard with all of the routing-to
show where we are at with all of the electrical and mechanical issues."

Other sources said Intel began shipping prototypes of its Camino chip set to
computer vendors earlier this month. Camino supports the Direct Rambus
DRAMs (D-RDRAMs), which deliver a peak bandwidth of 1.6
Gbytes/second over the Rambus channel. A spokesman at Intel's Folsom,
Calif., operation said the Comdex demo included "a prototype memory
controller" on the Pentium II-based machine, but declined to confirm the
reports on Camino.

Tests of the major components of the first generation of Rambus-based PCs
"are going on in real-time," said Jan Janick, vice president of development for
IBM Corp.'s client systems. "The next 30 days will tell whether we can ship
these boards in volume on schedule. But I am already a week later than I
wanted to be."

Intel's MacWilliams said the Rambus-based PCs would have two to three
times as much bandwidth as the PC-100 generation on the market today.

Though one source said Rambus-equipped desktops could be ready as early
as next April, Intel is shooting for a summer debut. Those desktops would
"not just be BX-based machines with Rambus memories," said Jan Camps, an
Intel manager working on the Rambus program, referring to the BX chip set
now in production. Intel expects PC OEMs to deliver a host of technologies
surrounding the faster memory architecture, including next-generation
graphics, security for electronic commerce, DVD drives and other features
discussed at the recent Intel Developers Forum.

Camps said Intel envisions a speed sort of the D-RDRAMs, with 400-MHz
parts going to "performance" desktops and a 300-MHz model to sub-$1,500
machines. That would help ensure higher revenue-and less wastage-at the
DRAM vendors.

As of last week, MacWilliams said Intel had tested 64-Mbit D-RDRAMs
from eight vendors, with Rambus in-line memory modules (RIMMs) in hand
from LG Semicon and Samsung Electronics, as well as NEC Corp. and
Toshiba Corp.

The machine shown at Comdex included eight 64-Mbit D-RDRAMs on a
single RIMM, with "continuity" modules inserted in the other RIMM slots to
keep the entire electrical path intact. Intel has succeeded in booting other
systems with 32 devices on the channel, MacWilliams added.

The cost of the Rambus technology remains an issue, and Intel recently
invested $500 million in Micron Technologies Inc. (Boise, Idaho) to ensure
that Micron puts its full weight behind the RDRAM.

128 Mbit is first

Wringing the cost out of the Rambus parts will be a major objective next year,
and several DRAM makers will jump to the 128-Mbit density to jam more
bits into the relatively expensive chip-scale package. The higher density also
will reduce the number of high-speed logic testers required to test the Rambus
interface circuitry.

IBM Microelectronics will come to the Rambus memory market initially with a
128-Mbit D-RDRAM in late 1999, using a 0.2-micron process, said Lane
Mason, a senior strategist based in Burlington, Vt. That design eventually
could be manufactured at IBM fabs in Burlington and in Essonnes, France,
and at the IBM-Toshiba joint venture, Dominion Semiconductor Corp., in
Manassas, Va.

Mason said the die-size penalty over synchronous DRAMs that's incurred by
using a 0.25-micron process at 64 Mbits would not produce a cost-effective
solution. Nor is IBM ready to jump to 256 Mbits, which will require first
0.17-micron and then 0.15-micron technologies.

"We view the 128-Mbit as the point where IBM can pick up the hunt, but the
256-Mbit generation is the point where RDRAMs will be the majority," said
Mason. "The Rambus memories will require more capital equipment, but that
is the same for any high-performance memory."

Samsung also will emphasize the 128-Mbit generation, said Avo Kanadjian, a
vice president at Samsung Semiconductor Corp. Most performance desktops
will ship with 128 Mbytes of base memory, which can be satisfied with a
single module populated with eight 128-Mbit D-RDRAMs. It is more
cost-effective to spread the additional package and testing cost over eight
128-Mbit parts than sixteen 64-Mbit parts, he said.

In Kanadjian's view, the 64-Mbit D-RDRAM will be an "enabler" that will
allow computer OEMs to get their Rambus-based systems validated and out
on the market; the 128-Mbit density will meet volume demands.

Kanadjian predicted that by the second half of next year a Direct Rambus
DRAM will carry a component-level premium of 30 to 35 percent over
SDRAMs. That will improve to "the mid-teens" in 2000, he said.

He discounted fears that the supply of RDRAMs will not be able to meet
demand. Samsung is investing about $250 million in its Austin, Texas, fab to
increase wafers per month to about 21,000, he said. Samsung will use a
0.23-micron process for its 128-Mbit Direct Rambus parts, moving to 0.18
micron for the 256-Mbit generation.

Back in South Korea, Samsung will increase its micro-BGA packaging
capability, as well as its RIMM module manufacturing and testing facility,
Kanadjian added.

Intel's MacWilliams said that during last year's push to bring up the PC-100
specification SDRAMs, "we learned the hard way" that work with the
memory-module industry is essential. "With the PC-100 program the module
makers picked up our Gerbers [for pc-board layout] and specifications, and
went off to do it. With this [Rambus] generation, we will have a lot more
interaction with the module industry."

At Tanisys Technology Corp. (Austin), the work required to manufacture and
test the RIMMs is topic No. 1. Joe Klein, an engineering manager at Tanisys,
said the shift to chip-scale packages on the D-RDRAMs will come in two
versions: center-bonded and edge-bonded CSPs, requiring separate RIMM
designs from the module makers.

"Noise is critical with the RIMM design because the voltage swing on the
Rambus memories is a lot smaller at higher frequencies," Klein said. "From a
system standpoint, I like the Rambus approach, because the channel has an
even distribution of the data and instruction wires, whereas with the
SDRAM-based DIMMs there was a much more uneven distribution."

The SDRAMs come in thin, small-outline packages, and it was relatively easy
to inspect the fillup. Tanisys will buy X-ray inspection equipment to ensure that
the solder balls on the CSP are properly attached to the board. With the
CSPs, "the via size on the pcbs is larger than the pads on the chips, so
soldering becomes an art," Klein said.

Also, he said, the module makers will need to be more vigilant about
controlling impedance, with tolerances that are half that of the DIMMs used in
the PC-100 specification. The RIMMs also will require a heat sink
clamshelled around the module, and thermal stress will be a bigger issue.

"With the PC-100 modules it was more of an evolution. The Rambus
generation is a revolution, but there aren't any particular issues that can't be
solved," said Klein, who earlier worked at IBM's memory division.

One Tanisys division makes module testers sold under the Dark Horse brand,
and that group is preparing the software and hardware required to test the
RIMMs at speed. That work should be finished by the first quarter, said Don
McCord, marketing manager at Tanisys.

Copyright ® 1998 CMP Media Inc.



To: Paul Engel who wrote (68962)11/22/1998 7:58:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel Investors - Another article on Intel's Comdex RAMBUS Demo.

The reference to the 133 MHz Front Side Bus (FSB) for the chip set confirms that this WAS the Camino Chip Set being used.

Paul

{==========================================}
techweb.com

November 23, 1998, Issue: 1136
Section: News

Intel passes another milestone -- But still faces challenge to
move Direct RDRAM into mkt.
Andrew MacLellan

Las Vegas- Placing the next brick as it builds its new desktop-platform
strategy, Intel Corp. last week demonstrated a PC running with Direct
Rambus DRAM as main memory and a 133-MHz front-side bus.

Although the company admittedly has some "heavy lifting" ahead, Intel and its
partners said they have assembled all the components necessary to ensure that
Rambus and its constituent parts will be available for next year's PC market.

Intel did not identify other elements of its new, high-speed platform, but
top-of-the-line PCs in 1999 are expected to include a Katmai processor
running at above 500 MHz, as well as a version of the Camino chipset; both
of these are slated for introduction in the first half of next year.

Intel anticipates that Rambus-enabled systems will dominate the
$1,200-to-$3,500 PC market in 2000, and said it has also identified early
interest among OEMs looking to push the technology into the price-sensitive
sub-$1,000 territory.

"The thing we want to make clear today is that we've hit all of the milestones
that we discussed [two years ago]," said Peter MacWilliams, an Intel fellow
and the company's director of platform architecture, in an interview at
Comdex/Fall '98 last week. "We said we'd have a working PC platform by
the end of 1998, and we have that today."

Five DRAM makers will have 800-MHz Direct RDRAM chips in volume
production in the first quarter of 1999, with another couple of module makers
lending their support to provide Rambus in-line memory modules and
so-called Continuity modules, MacWilliams said. In addition, various chip and
component suppliers are readying Direct RDRAM clock generators,
connectors, and memory controllers.

"We have 100% capability for ramping up in January, and from a connector
point of view, we haven't heard of any problems-it's a drop-in replacement,"
said Alan Walse, director of strategic product development for the datacom
division of Molex Inc.'s computer business unit, Lisle, Ill.

The introduction of the high-speed Rambus interface has been regarded warily
by many DRAM makers, because of both its aggressive performance
improvement-which makes certain associated demands on the system-and the
fact that suppliers must pay a small royalty to the technology's creator,
Mountain View, Calif.-based Rambus Inc.

Direct RDRAM is much faster than the 100- to 133-MHz SDRAM used
today. But because it requires the simultaneous transition to 2.5-V power,
chip-scale packaging, new module types, a different motherboard slot
configuration, and other supporting technologies, a number of component
suppliers have been skeptical that the launch will proceed smoothly.

Rambus supporters, however, claim that each of these hurdles has been
addressed. In the area of chip test, for example, which presented suppliers
with one of their biggest challenges, Hewlett-Packard Co. has launched both
single- and dual-pass I/O testers to supplement vendors' existing phalanx of
DRAM-core test equipment.

"We've seen the orders, and everybody needs one or a few systems to begin
with," said Gaylord Erickson, product marketing manager for HP's California
Semiconductor Test division in Santa Clara, Calif. "I think the volume demand
is consistent with a ramp into the market."

Intel likened its Rambus efforts to last year's successful program that launched
PC-100 SDRAM technology. While early bugs occurred, PC-100 is now the
dominant main memory used in today's consumer PCs.

"PC-100 was a nightmare for a lot of people in the fourth quarter of 1997,"
MacWilliams said. "In reality, it was a bunch of minor incompatibility problems
that were all worked out."

Still, the company acknowledges that it has a six-month challenge ahead if it's
to move Rambus memory into the market in mid-1999 as planned. "There's a
lot of difference between prototyping and volume production," MacWilliams
said. "There's still a lot of work left to do between now and midyear."

Copyright ® 1998 CMP Media Inc.