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To: John Koligman who wrote (55248)3/30/1999 6:08:00 PM
From: John Koligman  Respond to of 97611
 
Intel talks break down (Future I/O - NGIO)...

John

Intel, IBM break off I/O talks

By Rick Boyd-Merritt, EE Times
Mar 30, 1999 (12:45 PM)
URL: eetimes.com

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Representatives from Intel Corp. and IBM Corp.
have broken off talks aimed at ending a dispute over interconnect technology
for future PC servers. As a result, the Next-Generation I/O Forum, which is
backed by Intel, and the Future I/O group, which is supported by IBM,
Compaq Computer Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co., are moving ahead with
incompatible approaches to linking high-end systems and peripherals. "At
the moment the discussions are off," said Gary Abbott, a founding member
of the NGIO Forum, from Dell Computer Corp. (Round Rock, Texas). "In the
end a single standard probably does need to exist, but we may have to let the
marketplace battle that out for awhile."

The NGIO group has released a draft specification for a 2.5-Gbit/second
channel I/O architecture to its members. The group hopes to implement the
scheme in servers that will ship late next year using Intel's Foster 32-bit
processor.

For its part, the Future I/O group has said it aims to have an I/O specification
available late this year that it expects to see used in servers that would ship
in 2001, possibly targeting Intel's 64-bit McKinley processor, a successor to
the Merced chip.

Both groups were in close discussions and had made mutual concessions
as recently as last month, but hit insurmountable sticking points as the
negotiations proceeded.

Both groups had established independent organizations to develop their
technologies and both were based on a one-company, one-vote rule. And the
NGIO Forum had indicated its willingness to let members recoup modest
royalties on its architecture, a requirement for the Future I/O camp.

However, the NGIO group balked at suggestions the two camps should
combine and start afresh to tackle the problem.

Future I/O representatives said "they would prefer to start from scratch and
create a new spec," said Tom Macdonald, a general manager at the server
group of Intel (Hillsboro, Ore.) and a leader of the negotiations for the NGIO
Forum. "But their schedule is a year behind ours. And the reality is it could
take two years or more to work out a fresh approach, and I don't think the
market should have to wait."

For its part, the Future I/O group has expressed concern that the migration to
a new I/O architecture should be a gradual one from today's PCI. Specifically,
Compaq, IBM and HP collaborated to develop PCI-X, a version of PCI that
can run at speeds up to 132 MHz. They plan to roll out the first servers to
implement PCI-X later this year.

------



To: John Koligman who wrote (55248)3/30/1999 6:12:00 PM
From: Kenya AA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
John: Engel is one of SI's top sources of entertainment! Did you see the "award" The Register gave him?? LOL

I eat coffee beans all the time - never had a raw one though. BTW, are you going back to Starbucks?? <ggg>

K