Title: | The Digital way of working |
Moderator: | QUARK::LIONEL ON |
Created: | Fri Feb 14 1986 |
Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 5321 |
Total number of notes: | 139771 |
Subject: ****Is Intel Worried about DEC's Alpha? 02/22/93 Date: 22 Feb 93 23:14:08 GMT SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 FEB 22 (NB) -- Intel, in a recently released company publication, appears to be worrying out loud about competition between the Pentium and the Alpha chip from Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC). A question and answer portion of the publication addresses issues that the Alpha, a new 64-bit reduced instruction-set computing (RISC) chip is faster than, and will steal market share away from, the Pentium. The Pentium is the next generation Intel central processing unit (CPU) for DOS-based personal computers (PCs). Intel says the chip has 3.1 million transistors and is expected to be able to perform 100 million instructions-per-second (MIPS). The Alpha has 1.7 million transistors and is estimated to run at about 133 MIPS. DEC has been saying the Alpha is faster than the Pentium and offers a open technology so it can run multiple operating systems. This includes the long-awaited Windows NT from Microsoft which could open the door for DOS-based and Windows based applications to be run on RISC-based machines, thereby eliminating Intel's virtual monopoly on the DOS-based market. Microsoft was indeed running Windows NT on the Alpha AXP personal computer at the Fall Comdex show and both DEC and Microsoft were boasting about how few hours it took to get NT running on the AXP personal computer. While Windows NT will run on the Alpha, there are still no applications for it, according to Ronald Curry, Intel's marketing manager for the Pentium Processor. What Curry may have been referring to is that only 13 applications were demonstrated running on the Alpha under Windows NT at Comdex. Thirteen is a small number compared to the many thousands of applications for the Intel-based PC. According to Curry, that leaves software application developers still having to port their applications to RISC-based machines. Intel is betting software developers will focus on building applications for the Pentium first and spend time and money on RISC-based applications later. Alpha comes in several different "flavors." While Intel is not denying DEC's claims that the Alpha is faster, Curry said DEC is comparing the 150 megahertz (MHz) and 200MHz versions of the Alpha chip to the Pentium - versions that will not ship in quantity. According to Curry, "If you're just building a few hundred (chips), you can do all kinds of things to boost performance." Curry said that the chip DEC is planning to ship in volume is much closer to the Pentium in processing power. Other arguments are that the Pentium runs so hot, it cannot be run at its maximum operating speed and therefore still cannot compete with the Alpha chips comparable to the Pentium in speed. Curry answered that by admitting that the Pentium does put off more heat, but a redesign of the current motherboards by original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) will handle the extra thermal energy. Intel says the Pentium simply will not work in the systems built for the i386 and i486 and it has provided design information to OEMs to build Pentium-based systems. Transistors are the heat producing parts of the CPU. The more transistors, the more heat. Since the Alpha only has 1.7 million transistors, heat problems are not as much of an issue. The bottom line for Intel is the i486 will be the volume chip and the Pentium, expected for release in limited quantities in mid-May of this year will be for the very high-end user, and for applications much farther down the road. (Linda Rohrbough/19930219/Press Contact: Elizabeth Kemper, Intel, tel 916-356-5133, fax 916-356-3203 ; David Price, Digital Equipment Corporation, tel 603-881-0583)
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2387.1 | NLA0::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Thu Feb 25 1993 17:34 | 2 | |
What is the source for .0? It sounds interesting and I'd like to use it further. | |||||
2387.2 | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Thu Feb 25 1993 17:47 | 10 | |
RE: <<< Note 2387.1 by NLA0::ONO "The Wrong Stuff" >>> >>What is the source for .0? It sounds interesting and I'd like to >>use it further. Newsbytes, from a CLARInet group on the Usenet. You don't want to use it outside of DEC because there are licensing concerns. Posting it internally should be no problem (we paid da bucks). Greg | |||||
2387.3 | Pentium is hot... hmmm | ZENDIA::TBOYLE | Sat Mar 06 1993 20:29 | 11 | |
Ah so the truth comes out! I often expected that Alpha would not be much of a thorn to Intel because it is so "hot." (e.g. like a toaster.) Higher power consumption is one method to acheive higher speed, its an envelope pusher. I had not expected that Pentium was to be in limited quantities and "hot." If this is the case, Alpha may fare well. I say may because it is rather obvious that the volume of software will be Intel based and hence we would need the application running emulated to exceed 486 (I know I know, the win 32 apis run at speed, but I still want to see the total result to be convinced.) Tom | |||||
2387.4 | More on PENTIUM | MSD26::WOJDAK | Tue Mar 23 1993 09:06 | 41 | |
NS COMPUTER NEWS: Tracy Talcott, VNS Computer Desk - Littleton, MA, USA The VOGON News Service Edition : 2792 Tuesday 23-Mar-1993 Circulation: 7080 {The Wall Street Journal, 22-Mar-93, p. A3} When Intel announces today that it has begun shipping production versions of the Pentium, it doesn't plan to discuss perhaps the most important detail:price.But according to sources familiar with Intel's plans, the list prices for the chip will allow PC makers to sell desktop Pentium machines at prices that are relatively low for new-generation machines.PC makers say they expect their first Pentium machines - due out in May - to list for as little as $4,500. That's half the list price for the first machines built around Intel's current flagship, the 486, after it was introduced in 1989 and only about 50% more than a typical mail-order machine sells for today.Low-priced Pentium machines could put new downward pressure on PC prices and hasten the shift among PC buyers to Intel's new technology.But that's exactly what Intel wants. According to sources familiar with Intel's plans for the first two versions of the chip, the company has listed a slower, "60-megahertz," version at $905 each in lots of 1000 chips, but has discounted the price to about $850 each for some good customers. Intel has listed the faster, "66-megahertz," version, at $995 each, the sources said. The Pentium contains more than twice as many transistors as Intel's fastest 486, which lists for $570, and will run typical software more than twice as fast, Intel said. Compaq said it will begin selling multiprocessor Pentium servers - which chain together several chips for added processing power - and desktop machines in mid-May.Four other variations of the Pentium chip, Intel executives said earlier this year, are currently under development and about 200 employees are working on a next generation "P-6" chip being planned as Pentium's successor.Intel's Mr. Grove said it expects to ship "hundreds of thousands" of Pentiums in 1993, and reach a manufacturing rate of a million Pentium processors in 1994. | |||||
2387.5 | Performance numbers. | GAAS::BRAUCHER | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:36 | 21 | |
The main players now have performance as thus: SPECint92 SPECfp92 200MHz Alpha (10000-610) 116.5 193.6 182MHz Alpha (7000-610) 103.1 176.0 160MHz Alpha (4000-610) 94.6 137.6 150MHz Alpha (3000-500) 84.4 127.7 133MHz Alpha (3000-400) 74.8 112.5 66MHz Intel Pentium 64.5 56.9 60MHz Intel Pentium 58.3 52.2 i486DX2 66MHz 32.4 16.1 i486DX 33MHz 18.2 8.3 150MHz MIPS R4400 94 105 40MHz SUN SuperSPARC 53.2 63.4 99MHz HP PA-RISC 80 150.6 62.52MHz IBM RS/6000 59 125 | |||||
2387.6 | iCOMP(TM) Index vs. SPEC | ASDS::RIOPELLE | Thu Mar 25 1993 14:19 | 20 | |
I received some mail from INTEL. Seems I've made it to their mailing list. The last piece of mail was to explain to consumers their iCOMP(TM) Index " Your guide for comparing Microprocessor Performance" The index is advertised as an easy to understand rating that reflects the relative performance of all Intels CPU's. The chart that I have shows the i386(TM) Sx-2032 up to a i486 DX2-66. Thus the i486 DX2-66 being the top end of their line till their latest announcement. Question I have is : Shouldn't we be producing a similar graph that shows all the competitors, and our new ALPHA chip performance. Seems that Intel has sent this to all its customers, but it's really one sided. This may not be the place for this discussion, mods let me know. | |||||
2387.7 | Conference Pointer | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Mar 25 1993 14:31 | 5 |
If you are thinking that you're seeing this twice. The table of the previous reply also appears in MARKETING 2146.11. 2146 in ASIMOV::MARKETING contains the discussion of "How the Pentium will crush Alpha". | |||||
2387.8 | OLDTMR::BROWN | Thu Mar 25 1993 16:49 | 9 | ||
re .6 iCOMP is an Intel x86 specific benchmark. Actually, it's a weighted average of the results of other benchmarks (SPEC included), but it also has a x86 processor dependent component (ZD's processor stuff). We can run iCOMP under emulation, but the results won't be flattering. I'd like to see DEC come up with a new "EyeCOMP" rating that compares Alpha and Intel stuff on NT, but is heavily floating point intensive so that our numbers look great, but then again I don't work for legal. | |||||
2387.9 | ELWOOD::LANE | Good:Fast:Cheap: pick two | Mon Jul 19 1993 09:53 | 6 | |
I've extracted a long posting from a comp..dec Usenet group that gives one person's thoughts about Pentium vs. just about everything else including DEC's Alpha chip. It's not clear who that person is but it's interesting reading. The file is available as THETOY::BOX:CHIPS.TXT. It's 82 blocks. | |||||
2387.10 | CAPNET::ROSCH | Fri Sep 08 1995 15:13 | 62 | ||
Intel to develop 'world's fastest supercomputer' (c) 1995 Copyright The News and Observer Publishing Co. (c) 1995 N.Y. Times News Service SAN FRANCISCO (Sep 7, 1995 - 22:36 EDT) -- Intel Corp. said Thursday that it had won a contract from the Department of Energy to develop what it called the world's fastest supercomputer. The machine, to be built at an estimated cost of $45 million, would use 9,000 of Intel's forthcoming P6 microprocessors linked in a configuration known as massively parallel. In recent years, massively parallel computers using thousands of relatively inexpensive off-the-shelf chips have stolen the performance lomputers like those made famous by Cray Research Inc. which use far fewer but far more powerful processors. Intel said its new supercomputer would be the first to achieve the goal of calculating more than a trillion floating point operations a second, known as a teraflop. The machine, to be kept at querque, N.M., would be used by Department of Energy scientists to study a variety of complex problems, foremost among them nuclear weapons safety. "President Clinton is committed to ending underground nuclear testing," Victor Reis, assistant secretary for energy programs, said in a statement. "Computer simulation will be a principal means for ensuring the safety, reliability and effectiveness of the U.S. nuclear deterrent. We are embarking on a 10-year program to advance the state of high performance computing to meet national security objectives," he said. For Intel the contract is more important from the standpoint of prestige than as a rgenerator. Intel's supercomputer business, which is based in Beaverton, Ore., accounts for only a tiny fraction of the company's overall sales, but it contributes to the reputation that its microprocessors are suitable for all computing tasks, large or small. Until now, however, Intel's supercomputers have used an entirely different line of micrope used in personal computers. Intel's stock rose $2.50 Thursday, to $65, in active trading on Nasdaq, although the rise appeared to result less from the contract than from favorable comments by Thomas Kurlak, a Merrill Lynch analyst. He said that the likelihood of disappointing earnings was diminishing and that fourth-quarter growth could surge above 40 percent. "This contract answers one question, which is: What do you do with your supercomputer line when it is based on the 860, a dead microprocessor?," said Michael Slater, editor of the Microprocessor Report, an industry newsletter. "The answer is you move 6," he said. The P-6, the successor to Intel's Pentium microprocessor, is scheduled to begin production and receive its official name later this year. "Scalability was an important goal in designing the P6," Andrew Grove, Intel's president and chief executive, said in a statement. "It's exciting that we can create a system 10 times more powerful than the fastest supercomputer in the world today using the same chips we'll be putting into desktop PCs." |