T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4114.1 | Bill Husted had copy to fill | MKOTS3::WTHOMAS | | Mon Sep 11 1995 12:48 | 14 |
| Rule #3 of Bill's rules:
"The market works - keep in close touch; move with it."
If anyone in our industry is an example of doing that to near
perfection, Intel & Microsoft are. There will be a market friendly
growth path, when the time comes.
Husted smoke. It's always amazing at the propensity of some of these
"market" watchers to predict disaster so far ahead, with the absence of
objective data, toward companies that owe their current industry position
to unparalleled mastery of the marketplace.
My $$$ is on Grove and Gates.
|
4114.2 | ...about my earlier reply... | MKOTS3::WTHOMAS | | Mon Sep 11 1995 12:54 | 1 |
| Uh, correction...that's Hastings, not Husted 8~).
|
4114.3 | | MU::porter | there is no such word as 'centric' | Mon Sep 11 1995 13:39 | 16 |
| > RISC chips like the P7. That would mean, Hastings said, that
> Windows 95 could be a short-lived operating system.
This is big news? Someone from Microsoft (Allchin? I forget.
Could have been anyone except Brad Silverberg, I suppose)
has already said as much in the press. I think his
prediction was about 3 years. The long term direction
for Windows is Windows NT. Windows 95 exists because
too many people can't afford the hardware needed to
run NT; but hardware gets cheaper.
Even the P6 is a better fit to NT than to Win95. That's because
16-bit code slows down the P6, and some significant components
of Win95 (probably USER) are still 16-bit code. Not so with NT.
|
4114.5 | And then there's P7 versus P7... | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Mon Sep 11 1995 13:42 | 10 |
| The trade rags have also carried stories describing Intel as
developing two different "P7"s: One is the obvious follow-on
to the x86, Pentium, and P6, and uses all the same performance
through micro-level RISCYness tweaks. The other is the H/P
VLIW x86+PA/RISC thing.
Whichever gets to the gate first with the most gets the
official monicker of "P7".
Atlant
|
4114.6 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, Alpha Developer's support | Mon Sep 11 1995 14:07 | 3 |
| gosh, two P7 projects. Sounds like something KO would've done.
Mark
|
4114.7 | Back-off in Intel plans | STAR::jacobi.zko.dec.com::JACOBI | Paul A. Jacobi - OpenVMS Alpha Development | Mon Sep 11 1995 14:23 | 8 |
|
Intel is now marketing the P6 strictly toward SMP NT server. The Win 3.1
and WIN95 users are expected to migrate to the P55, running at 150Mhz and
180Mhz.
-Paul
|
4114.8 | New Motorola Plant | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Mon Sep 11 1995 14:33 | 7 |
| I see where Motorola just announced a new semiconductor facility near
Richmond, Virginia. I believe the cost of the facility is going to be
$3.0 billion and employ up to 5,000. It seems like the article
mentioned that PowerPC chips would be built there. This could be a
move by Motorola to have the production capacity to offer the desktop
market an alternative to Intel when the x86 architecture hits the wall.
|
4114.9 | Bill Said it on Larry King | FX28PM::SMITHP | Written but not read | Mon Sep 11 1995 15:15 | 17 |
| RE: .3
>> RISC chips like the P7. That would mean, Hastings said, that
>> Windows 95 could be a short-lived operating system.
>This is big news? Someone from Microsoft (Allchin? I forget.
>Could have been anyone except Brad Silverberg, I suppose)
>has already said as much in the press. I think his
>prediction was about 3 years. The long term direction
>for Windows is Windows NT.
Bill Gates said as much on Larry King live. When ask about having
to purchase Windows 96, 97 as follow-on's to Windows 95, Bill said...
Buy Windows 95 today and you will be set for about 3 years.
3 years from now your WNT choices will be "Windows NT Workstation"
and "Windows NT Server" or the same WNT choices you have today.
|
4114.10 | Rumors of its demise are greatly.... | GLDOA::WERNER | Still crazy after all these years | Mon Sep 11 1995 15:30 | 35 |
| For those who have not been following the the various P6 articles, some
further data might add some insight. The current P6 chips are made on
Intels 5 micron process line and have shown themselves to "test poorly"
onbenchmarks that involve older 16-bit code. The official Intel line is
that the design engineers made some trade-offs, based on the
assumptions early in the P6 design process. Those assumptions had to do
with the timing and marketplace acceptance of WIn95 and subsequent
32-bit follow-ons and the attendant movement of the application market
ot 32-bits. The delays in getting WIN95 out have come back to haunt
Intel more than Microsoft. The design trade-offs involved the decision
not to use up transitors for executing some complex 16-bit
instrucutions. Rather those are emulated on the P6. We all know how
fast that can be - even the Alpha runs slow when emulating the Intel
CISC instruction set.
So, Intel has a temporary problem, until the world moves to 32-bit
processing and apps, which the P6 does run about twice as fast. They
aslo have an interim solution - a faster chip implementation, based on
their .3 micron process line. That solution will come on line early
next year. The .3 micron chips will be clocked faster, so that even
though it is still an emulation, it won't be as noticiably slower than
current Pentiums. In 32-bit mode, the .3 micron P6 will scream and will
easily keep up with the PowerPC (although not the Alpha). At the same
time that Intel moves to the .3 micron process they plan to introduce a
dual cavity model with twice the secondary cache, as well as
introducing a model without the dual cavity design and no secondary
cache.
One of the more interesting charts that Bob Palmer showed in his recent
Fianancial Analysts briefing was the chart that showed the P6 and P7
staying right with the PowerPC and MIPS chips and beating the SUN chip,
but unable to come close to the Alpha chip. It looks like we have the
better mouse trap. Now if the world only knew the way to our doorstep.
-OFWAMI-
|
4114.11 | Like engineers getting paid to write... | LACV01::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Mon Sep 11 1995 15:57 | 9 |
|
Or we have the brains, and guts, to "light" the path to that door.
But then, when is the last time Digital spent money doing real
marketing as opposed to no-content advertising and feel good road
shows?
the Greyhawk
|
4114.12 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Mon Sep 11 1995 16:10 | 7 |
| Have no fear: Caldwell and the Digital Semi pricing committee will
keep EV5 (the only one of the three Alpha models faster than Pentium
is *now*) at such a completely rediculous price that few inroads
into the mainstream will ever be made.
On a related note: there's still time to get FAB6 ready for Spooky
World; might as well use the excess capacity for something.
|
4114.4 | (Edited for typos) "You heard it here first!" | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Mon Sep 11 1995 19:05 | 21 |
| The trade rags have been carrying similar articles, and this
really is supported by the earlier thinking in RISC design.
While Intel has done an enormous job of adding RISCy features
to a CISC architecture, there's only so much they can do.
Without the higher-level knowledge that only the compiler
has about the structure of the program, it takes exponentially
more work by the chip's micro-architecture for diminishing
returns.
P6 offers very good performance on some instructions and med-
iocre performance on others.
Now this will be nay-sayed by those who have an extreme vested
interest in the x86 CISC architecture. But it's still a pretty
good bet to be true. PowerPC is the obvious heir to the throne
of "next humongous microprocessor success", but some smart
marketing might give Alpha a shot at this. Do you suppose we'll
do it, or go down with Wintel's ship, out of not wanting to bad-
mouth our PC business?
Atlant
|
4114.13 | | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC: ReClaim TheName&Glory! | Mon Sep 11 1995 21:21 | 9 |
| .12> On a related note: there's still time to get FAB6 ready for Spooky
.12> World; might as well use the excess capacity for something.
Ummm... Howzabout "Wear an ALPHAgeneration mask this Halloween...
They're so fast you won't mind how small they are!"
Do I get a reward for helping our marketing effort along?? :-)
|
4114.14 | PowerPC | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Tue Sep 12 1995 12:25 | 11 |
| BusinessWeek, 9/11, p. 50
IBM MAY PULL THE PLUG ON POWERPC
After Two Years Of Bungling, sales of PowerPC
computers are below IBM's modest hopes. That's
why - in the next few weeks, insiders say - IBM
will decide whether to pull the plug on its Power
Personal Systems Division, which makes PowerPC,
folding its products and development efforts into
IBM PC Co. or another unit.
|
4114.15 | | HERON::KAISER | | Tue Sep 12 1995 12:49 | 6 |
| I just came from a meeting in which someone said her group needs support
for a couple of PowerPCs. She really meant PPC-based Macs. Then she and
another guy added, almost simultaneously "well, they aren't really
Macintoshes either...."
___Pete
|
4114.16 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Wed Sep 13 1995 09:24 | 17 |
| > <<< Note 4114.15 by HERON::KAISER >>>
>
>...PowerPCs. She really meant PPC-based Macs.
If this is what she meant, then they ARE "real Macs."
Apple has made the transition to PowerPC as the Mac processor.
The next version of the operating system (Mac OS version 8, code name Copland,
due out in mid-1996) is expected to support ONLY PowerPC-based Macs.
There are other PPC-based platforms. The most contentious right now
is called "CHRP" (Common Hardware Reference Platform), which is a PowerPC
platform that is targeted to eventually run ALL the major desktop operating
systems: Mac, some flavor(s) of Unix, Windows NT, and probably more.
It's possible to have PowerPC "Mac-like" things that aren't Macs.
Could these people have CHRPs?
- tom]
|
4114.17 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Sep 13 1995 09:26 | 7 |
| > It's possible to have PowerPC "Mac-like" things that aren't Macs.
> Could these people have CHRPs?
Or PREPs (the earlier, pre-CHRP PowerPC Reference Architecture)?
IBM is currently selling PREP-compliant systems running AIX.
Atlant
|
4114.18 | | DPE1::ARMSTRONG | | Wed Sep 13 1995 10:11 | 12 |
| >I just came from a meeting in which someone said her group needs support
>for a couple of PowerPCs. She really meant PPC-based Macs. Then she and
>another guy added, almost simultaneously "well, they aren't really
>Macintoshes either...."
Perhaps this is like saying that OpenVMS on Alpha is not really
a Vax. Except that Apple didn't change the name of their operating
system when the converted to a new processor chip. And they
dont differentiate between the OS and the Hardward...its all a Mac.
But anyone who does not think a PPC based Mac is 'really' a Mac
has never used one.
|
4114.19 | | MU::porter | there is no such word as 'centric' | Wed Sep 13 1995 10:24 | 5 |
| > system when the converted to a new processor chip. And they
> dont differentiate between the OS and the Hardward...
Hmm, you mean Apple calls the hardware "System 7" as well?
|
4114.20 | It's How They Market It | MR2SRV::sedialup2.mro.dec.com::wwillis | MCS/OMS Service Engineering | Wed Sep 13 1995 23:44 | 9 |
| I would venture to say that the majority of the MAC's users don't even KNOW
what System 7 is! Like I think .18 was trying to say, Apple's marketing
emphasizes the benefits of the overall product (a valuable productivity
tool)
and not its components (OS, hardware, periferals).
C'Ya,
Wayne
|
4114.21 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Thu Sep 14 1995 10:54 | 10 |
| BTW, Its "Mac" or "Macintosh", but not "MAC". It is not an acronymn.
On the contrary, I would think that most Mac users are aware of System
7 and beyond. After all, they are selling System 7.5 for $99 to
the existing Mac community. I think that most Mac users know what
"System 7" is since a large part of the software available for the Mac
now requires System 7 to function (or have limited functionality on
System 6).
-John
|
4114.22 | It's All In The Marketing | MR2SRV::oohyoo.mro.dec.com::wwillis | MCS/OMS Service Engineering | Thu Sep 14 1995 14:44 | 11 |
| How many times have you seen/read/heard Apple use the phrase "System 7" in
ANY advertisment?
For example, look at Apples new TV ads attacking the ease of use claims of
Windows 95. I don't think they mention the name of the OS at all. Again,
the benefits of the complete product is emphasized and not its components.
This has everything to do with the Mac's target audience, most of whom
couldn't care less about what's "under the hood".
C'Ya,
Wayne
|
4114.23 | Better brand image | FUNYET::ANDERSON | Where's the nearest White Castle? | Thu Sep 14 1995 18:41 | 4 |
| The name of the Macintosh operating system is now MacOS. System 7 then refers
to a specific version(s) of that operating system.
Paul
|
4114.24 | "Their Brand Promise is Ease of Use" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Fri Sep 15 1995 17:32 | 6 |
| re: .22 -
Amen- Apple is fighting to retain their brand image as STILL the easiest
system to use and install. And that is the company promise - not the
operating system. It may do no better for them than hold market share,
but they still have the best out of the box/ease of use consumer
story to tell, although the lead is eroding.
|
4114.25 | Big Blues | DPDMAI::ROSE | | Thu Nov 02 1995 02:40 | 6 |
| re:-1
...and so is thier comittment to the OS as they try selling it or
themselves to Big Blue.
..Larry
|