T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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508.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Fri Apr 08 1988 00:17 | 10 |
| We make our own microprocessors, memory/disk/video controller chips
and other support chips. We buy DRAMs from several sources.
Semiconductor Engineering puts out a fascinating newsletter
(used to be called LSI Focus, now something else) that tells the
rest of DEC what SEG has available and what's coming. The newsletter
is restricted-distribution, so it may be hard to get ahold of.
Also, if the jargon of semiconductor engineers gives you MEGO
syndrome (My Eyes Glaze Over), you may want to skip it.
Steve
|
508.2 | DEC #6 | THRUST::MIANO | The music of the night... | Fri Apr 08 1988 18:05 | 4 |
| Actually, the last time I heard, DEC was the sixth largest manufacturer
of semiconductor devices in the world.
IBM, of course, is first.
|
508.3 | | STRATA::JBURKE | | Sat Apr 09 1988 17:32 | 9 |
| re 2.
I don't know for sure, but I seriously doubt that DEC is the sixth
largest manufacturer of semiconductors. Take a look at companies
like Intel, Motorola, TI, and a whole slew of Japanese companies
that make literally millions of chips. Remember DEC only makes chips
for their own use. Now, IBM being one of the largest consumers,
I can see how IBM is the largest. I think IBM might also sell chips
too. I think SCO here in Hudson tends to be more R & D than mass
production.
|
508.4 | | CNTROL::GANDARA | | Mon Apr 11 1988 00:32 | 9 |
|
re .2 & .3 I think the claim should of been originaly stated:
DEC is the sixth largest CAPTIVE chip manufacturer, no way were
even close to sixth in the whole industry, unless of course we have
about eight fabs the company is keeping a secret from us.
Rob
|
508.5 | | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Mon Apr 11 1988 19:17 | 5 |
| > I think SCO here in Hudson tends to be more R & D than mass
> production.
FYI: almost all of the chips produced by DEC are manufactured in Hudson, MA
|
508.6 | We do sell chips | ACE::BREWER | John Brewer Component Engr. @ABO | Sat Apr 16 1988 12:24 | 10 |
|
re.3
DEC does/did sell chips on the outside market (T-11, LSI-11
chip set etc.)
re Hudson not being a volume manufacturer.... So THATS why we
cant get uVax CPU chips here!!! :-)
-John
|
508.7 | Externally produced.... | DIXIE1::LOWE | Can you Grok it? | Mon Apr 18 1988 05:10 | 11 |
| Not all of our microprocessors are manufactured internally...
The Rainbow has an 8088 from Intel and a Z80 from Zilog (?). The
VAXmate has an Intel 80286. I think that some of our peripherals (the
LN03R) have Motorola 68000 microprocessors.
Who knows, we might even have a machine with an Intel 80386 in the
works....?
/Brett
|
508.8 | Yes, no, no, yes, yes. Or something like that. | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Mike @DTN 225-4959 | Tue Apr 19 1988 12:28 | 10 |
| Just so there is no misunderstanding, we do produce, in the
volumes we need, our custom chips. For MicroVAX and CVAX
that's no small number.
Parts like Q-Bus interface are produced elsewhere.
We do actively sell chips. I provide, through MSD, the technical
customer support.
And yes, we don't produce commodity parts.
|
508.9 | how quickly they forget ... :-) | MARKER::KALLIS | Why is everyone getting uptight? | Wed Apr 20 1988 16:52 | 6 |
| Re .7 (Brett):
... and the DECmate II/III system uses a 6120 chip from (?) [I think
there are two sources].
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
508.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Wed Apr 20 1988 23:38 | 5 |
| The 6120 chip is from Harris, and before that, Intersil. I think
the J-11 chip was supposed to be from Harris also, but there were
problems and now we make it ourselves.
Steve
|
508.11 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | Watchin the whites of my eyes turn red | Thu Apr 21 1988 09:48 | 13 |
| Yea, the J11 was initially built by Harris, but that was such a
black hole for money that Hudson finally decided to build it
themselves.(a good decision in my mind)
For a while, rumor had it that Harris was going to fold up the
semiconductor operation and call it quits. The people in Hudson
who designed the J11 and were buying them from harris were quite
nervous at the time.
Do they still make chips at Harris?
-bill
|
508.12 | Harris is Still in the Chip Business | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Mike @DTN 225-4959 | Thu Apr 21 1988 12:37 | 3 |
| > Do they still make chips at Harris?
Yes.
|
508.13 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | | Thu Apr 21 1988 18:15 | 21 |
| Steve Lionel:
I don't think Intersil ever made the 6120. They *DID* make the
6102 though (the earlier, slower CMOS-8 used in the WT/WS-78).
They also sold the 6102 commercially on their own.
RE Harris:
A long time ago, there was a Digital centerfold ad for the "J11
Family" (back when we intended to sell chips, boards, and systems)
in some electronics trade newspaper which showed a powerful-looking
stallion rearing up. The caption was "Bred for performance..."
(This was at a time when the "20 MHz" J11 was actually clocking
at somewhere between 10 and 400 KILOHERTZ.)
A copy of the ad was posted on 5-5. Below the caption, some wag
had scrawled: "Digital sues for return of the stud fee".
Atlant
|
508.14 | RE: DCJ11 | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Mike @DTN 225-4959 | Thu Apr 21 1988 18:47 | 18 |
| Just so people wont get the wrong idea on the DCJ11...
We do sell the part externally. Most are 15 MHz parts but there
are some 18 MHz parts now being sold. Most of DEC's products
use the 18 MHz part. The (late) PRO380 used a 10 MHz bin.
If you have an interested customer, contact Kathy Breda
(RETORT::BREDA). She is located at DLB in Marlboro. It is her
group that must handle volume contracts.
The only parts we use or sell are made by Harris in Florida.
Hudson has the process and has made some parts. These must be
qualified in product before volume production and the demand
increased.
As far as I know there was never a J11 "family" unless someone
pointed out that the J11 was really two chips on a hybrid or
stuck in the DC319 DLART as a family member.
|
508.15 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Thu Apr 21 1988 22:36 | 9 |
| Ok, yes, Intersil didn't make the 6120. Didn't Western Digital come
out with the 6100, the first PDP-8 chip?
We also sell the DCT11 externally, in HUGE quantities. Atari is one
of the biggest customers. And there are of course always rumors that
we might get around to selling the 78R32 (RTVAX) or a CVAX equivalent,
but I wouldn't place any bets.
Steve
|
508.16 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | Watchin the whites of my eyes turn red | Fri Apr 22 1988 08:47 | 21 |
| RE:.14
Mike, I also thought that we sold the FPJ11 chip to a few customers.
I can certainly remember phone calls asking how the damned thing
worked. I didn't hang around long enough to see any of the designs
go into production though.
RE: J11
I think if you look at all of the J11 designs (both internal and
external) you'll find that the Atex machine is the WORLDS FASTEST
PDP11 that is sold today. (yup, they beat us) Their design is
really a piece of work. They actually stop the clock and wait for
the memory to catch up, thus giving them a 6 clock tick read instead
of the minimum 8 tick read (unless of course you hit cache) It
really made for a FAST machine.
-bill
|
508.17 | Just for laughs, read it | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney DTN 352.2157 | Fri Apr 22 1988 10:40 | 8 |
| If you are following this note with interest, and I know you are,
the anonymous "Charlie Matco" column of the current Digital Review
discusses in less than complimentary terms Digital's chips and PDP-11
strategy. It is, of course, incorrect but since 100,000 people have
read what's written there, it creates its own importance.
I definitely won't post any text from it here as I fear it would be
extracted and circulated within the company labelled as "my" position.
|
508.18 | DCJ/FPJ11 Together Forever | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Mike @DTN 225-4959 | Fri Apr 22 1988 12:50 | 4 |
| Yes, the FPJ11 is sold with the DCJ11. The "warm" floating
point in the DCJ microcode isn't fast enough for most.
Pat! That last sentence sounds a bit paranoid :-)
|
508.19 | KDJ11-B stops clock, too | SLDA::OPP | | Tue Apr 26 1988 11:38 | 20 |
| RE:.16
If you study the design of the KDJ11-B, you'll find two entirely
different clock designs - one which stops and one which doesn't.
The J-11 is clocked by a crystal oscillator at a frequency of either
15 MHz or 18 MHz and is free-running. The state machine which inter-
faces to the PMI/Q-BUS, has an asynchronously started, delay-line
based clock, which allows the state machine to be "asleep" when no
bus activity is impending AND to "wake up" in a few nanoseconds
when a starting event is detected. If memory serves, the period
on this clock was about 85 nsec. Apparently, ATEX actually stopped
the clock to the J-11, which should be doable with CMOS but was
not done in any DEC designs of which I am aware.
I have been told that J-11's were used in experiments at liquid
nitrogen temperatures at frequencies well above 18 MHz. I believe
a paper was presented at ISSCC a few years back describing some
of this work.
Greg Opp
|
508.20 | exit | PRAVDA::JACKSON | Watchin the whites of my eyes turn red | Tue Apr 26 1988 13:02 | 21 |
| Yup, ATEX stops the clock to the J11. They don't use crystal
but drive the CLK2 signal from an external source.
If you don't want to know the details, go the the next note now,
otherwise, a little more about the J11
The J11 is somewhat strange when it does reads. If you can round
trip a read in less than 4 clock ticks, you do it synchronously
and the thing goes very fast. This is where most cache designs
fit in. If you miss the 4 tick mark, the machine starts going
asynchronous and you have a minimum of 8 clock ticks, 10 if you
want parity. What Atex did was to stop the clock so the processor
saw all reads as 4tick reads. The acutal time of a read was about
5 ticks or so of the clock if it was running continuously.
A really interesting design. And it really GOES!
-bill
|
508.21 | All async? | SLDA::OPP | | Wed Apr 27 1988 13:31 | 7 |
| RE: .20
Does this imply that their CPU is entirely asynchronous logic
circuits with no master clock? If not, how do they establish
synchronization between the J-11 and other circuits on board?
Thanks,
Greg
|
508.22 | DEC Customers can sometimes teach us a lot! | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | | Wed Apr 27 1988 17:50 | 20 |
| Greg:
ATEX had a lot of prior experience hackingthe 11/34(A). The 11/34
has no free-running clock -- All CPU timing was established from a
synchronously-stoppable, asynchronously startable delay-line oscil-
lator. All UNIBUS timing was done by a similar, but separate timing
line. Then, by adding enough green wires from deep in the machine
to some external logic and memory, ATEX not only achieved many mega-
bytes of physical memory (on our 256 KByte machine) but they also
achieved an effective memory access time equivalent to UNIBUS memory
running at 50nS access times!!
All in all, it was a truly wonderful application of DEC Iron.
(I don't suppose they ever returned many CPU modules under the
warranty program, though. ;-) )
I'd bet you'd find that they adapted the 11/34A-style clocking
scheme to the J11.
Atlant
|
508.23 | Jee, it must be summer time (moderators are on vacation) | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Apr 28 1988 09:25 | 0 |
508.24 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | | Thu Apr 28 1988 14:31 | 10 |
| But Vikas...
I thought about that as I wrote, and I specifically chose the
title for my reply to tie us back into the "DEC way of working"
theme! I'd actually like to see some discussions arise from this.
> < Note 508.22 by ATLANT::SCHMIDT >
> -< DEC Customers can sometimes teach us a lot! >-
Atlant
|