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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kevin K. Spurway who wrote (43134)12/10/1998 1:06:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1571924
 
Kevin - Re: "Too bad KNI has ZERO for software support."

You still don't get it !

You are off in a dream world - get back to reality.

techweb.com

Intel Finishes Beta Of Katmai Processor
Instructions
(05/07/98; 10:34 a.m. ET)
By Anthony Cataldo, EE Times

LONG BEACH, Calif. -- Intel completed the
beta version of its instruction set for the Katmai
processor and is now working with more than
50 software-game developers to optimize their
code for 70 single-instruction, multiple-data
(SIMD) floating-point instructions, the company
said. At the same time, both Intel and Microsoft
are providing low-level compiler tools for the
new instruction set. The tools are considered a
critical ingredient that was missing from Intel's
previous MMX development program.


Like other graphics-accelerator vendors
present at the Computer Game Developers
Conference here in Long Beach, Calif., Intel
(company profile) said it hopes to woo 3-D
game developers to optimize their software for
what Intel expects to be the premier PC
platform for 1999. Such a system will include
the 100-MHz 440BX chip set, the i740 3-D
graphics processor, and a Katmai processor
running faster than 400 MHz, said Taufik Ma,
independent software vendor marketing
manager for Intel's Microprocessor 6 division,
in Hillsboro, Ore.

In 1996, Intel made a similar effort to convince
software developers to write games geared for
the MMX instruction set, which consisted of 57
new SIMD integer instructions. But the company
said it failed to provide the right tools to make it
easier for software developers.

"We learned a lot from MMX," Ma said. "We
didn't have compilers for MMX, which wasn't
too pleasant for developers because they had
to hand code everything."

The Katmai compilers, which will be available
later this year, will be offered as a plug-in for
Microsoft's Visual C++ suite. The compiler will
include instrinsics, which the company said will
give developers the ability to write in C with
nearly the same efficiency as hand-coded
assembly language. A related tool called VTune
will let the program make use of the parallelism
of SIMD instructions, Ma said.

What's more, Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel will
provide similar compiler tools for the MMX
instruction set in July. Intel has already signed
on 100 companies, Ma said.

Ma said Intel has put three times more
resources into Katmai compared with its MMX
development efforts. This includes more
engineering support, coding tools, authoring
tools, libraries, and development platforms for
software companies. Some of the software
companies it has engaged with include
Westwood Studios, id Software, Microsoft,
LucasArts Entertainment, Activision, Definition
Six, Shiny Entertainment, and Black Isle
Studios.

Meanwhile, Intel has released a software
developer's kit for its i740 3-D graphics
processor. The company said the new tools will
enable software developers to monitor how
systems partition the 3-D processing load
between the graphics processor and central
processing unit and make adjustments for
better performance and system balance.

{=========================================}

Paul



To: Kevin K. Spurway who wrote (43134)12/10/1998 1:09:00 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1571924
 
<Too bad KNI has ZERO for software support. Otherwise we could see KNI in action.>

It's kind of hard to have KNI-enabled software already out there when Katmai hasn't even been released yet.

And no, contrary to popular opinion here on the AMD thread, KNI isn't going to be useless without DirectX 7.0. Or do people still think that all KNI-enhanced functionality must be encapsulated within one Microsoft API? Remember, we already saw the benefits of 3D-Now even before Microsoft released DirectX 6.0.

Tenchusatsu