T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4770.1 | performance yes, but at what cost? | AIAG::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Tue Aug 13 1996 11:16 | 6 |
| fast is nice, but what about price/performance? where do we stand on that?
I remember years ago there was this company called CRAY who blew the doors off
everyone in performance, but where are they now?
-mark
|
4770.2 | We stand very nicely on price/performance.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Tue Aug 13 1996 11:51 | 16 |
|
And those pages currently don't include the AlphaStation 500/500
announced last week.
SPECint95 = 15.0, SPECfp95 = 19.5, which makes it the
fastest desktop workstation in the world... period.
|fast is nice, but what about price/performance? where do we stand on that?
We must be pretty bad, huh? SPEC doesn't include prices of system
under test for CPU95 results. That's why Ideas-International doesn't
include the price. But you're right, we have a lower price/performance.
Oops, lower is better, isn't it.
-mr. bill
|
4770.3 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Tue Aug 13 1996 12:02 | 4 |
| Set your web pointers to http://www.onsale.com
and you can bid on some Alpha-based PC's being auctioned off...
going price is about $700. Pretty good SPEC numbers too.
Kratz
|
4770.4 | fast but NOT available | DECIDE::MOFFITT | | Tue Aug 13 1996 14:08 | 12 |
|
> And those pages currently don't include the AlphaStation 500/500
> announced last week.
Same old question - how about some part numbers? Nice to talk about hot boxes
but all the numbers in the world don't matter a bit if you can't order one, let
alone get a delivery date.
How about some SPEC numbers for the ALphaServer 8400 5/440 - a machine we can
quote today. Why no performance numbers on that pup?
tim m.
|
4770.5 | Don't be too hard on them, it's a new game | BBPBV1::WALLACE | Unix is digital. Use Digital UNIX. | Tue Aug 13 1996 14:15 | 11 |
| The AlphaStation 500/500 folks are between a rock and a hard place.
People like me and .-1 want part numbers. But the rest of the industry
are all having great fun playing pre-announcement games. The
AlphaStation 500 folks have taken a slight liberty of attempting to
gain some publicity a little while before the stuff is orderable. I'd
love part numbers to be available, but I'd also like to thank the
AlphaStation folks for playing a bit of the same game that everyone
else does.
regards
john
|
4770.6 | Silly me | WRKSYS::ROLLA | | Tue Aug 13 1996 15:50 | 3 |
| ... and I thought OWNING 50% of SPECint and SPECfp top
20 was a good thing, something a DIGITAL employee could
be proud of.
|
4770.7 | | AIAG::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Tue Aug 13 1996 16:02 | 8 |
| > ... and I thought OWNING 50% of SPECint and SPECfp top
> 20 was a good thing, something a DIGITAL employee could
> be proud of.
It *is* a good thing, but does it put meat on the table? I'd settle for a
smaller % of something more tangible, like the server market, desktop, etc...
-mark
|
4770.8 | Pssst. We beat SGI at graphics (SPEC GPC OPC viewperf) too.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Tue Aug 13 1996 16:18 | 39 |
| re: Note 4770.4 by DECIDE::MOFFITT
| Same old question - how about some part numbers?
The already shipping hot box is the AlphaStation 500/400. PB56*
are the part numbers for those.
| Nice to talk about hot boxes but all the numbers in the world don't
| matter a bit if you can't order one, let alone get a delivery date.
The press release said the AlphaStation 500/500 will be available in
September. That's just a few weeks away. You can probably SWAG what
the part numbers will be. (The 8MB cache will be available Q4CY96.)
If you are just curious about the part numbers, please be patient.
But if you have an immediate need to know, there are better ways to
find out than here in the Digital conference.
|How about some SPEC numbers for the ALphaServer 8400 5/440 - a machine we can
|quote today. Why no performance numbers on that pup?
There *ARE* SPEC CPU95 performance numbers for that pup. Again, there
are better ways to find out than here in the Digital conference.
If you are just curious, please be patient.
-----
re: Note 4770.5 by BBPBV1::WALLACE "Unix is digital. Use Digital UNIX."
| I'd love part numbers to be available, but I'd also like to thank the
| AlphaStation folks for playing a bit of the same game that everyone
| else does.
Not just playing, playing *AND* winning. (Making a splash at
SIGGRAPH'96 just a couple of weeks before all the i's were crossed
and t's dotted was absolutely the right thing to do.)
So how many of your customers are ready to switch to Digital?
-mr. bill
|
4770.9 | More details | WRKSYS::DISCHLER | I don't wanna wait in vain | Tue Aug 13 1996 16:35 | 190 |
| <<< WRKSYS::AXP_TOOLS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]ALPHASTATION500.NOTE;1 >>>
-< AlphaStation500 >-
================================================================================
Note 79.6 Highest performance uni-processor machine on earth 6 of 6
BLOFLY::SMITHP "Beware the knights who say "NT"..." 182 lines 13-AUG-1996 04:17
-< AS500 and PowerStorm announcement with ViewPerf... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here's the announcement from our geography, which includes Viewperf
figures for the new 4D40T/50T/60T cards (were these achieved with the
AS500/500 ??).
We now have a quantitative comparison with SGI Impact series !
Cheers,
Peter.
IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE ALERT IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE
IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE ALERT IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE
IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE ALERT IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE
8th August 1996
Digital announce new High-end Workstation and
More Powerful PowerStorm graphics
*********************************************************************
A few months back Hewlett-Packard announced new PA-8000 workstations
which wrested the workstation single processor performance crown from
Digital Equipment's AlphaStation range. Now it appears Digital has
reacted to HP with its own announcement. Digital has introduced a new
high-performance AlphaStation 500/500. The desktop workstation uses a
500MHz Alpha DEChip 21164 processor and 8MB of secondary cache and
has posted SPEC95 figures which manage to eclipse that of HP's high-
end PA-8000 workstation, the model C180-XP. (see table below)
-------------------------------------------------------------
Competitive Single Processor SPECint95 and SPECfp95
-------------------------------------------------------------
Company Model fp95 int95 Processor MHz
-------------------------------------------------------------
Digital AlphaStation 500/500 19.5 15.0 Alpha 21164 500
HP HP 9000 C180-XP 18.7 11.8 PA-8000 180
HP HP 9000 C160 16.3 10.4 PA-8000 160
Digital AlphaStation 500/400 14.1 12.0 Alpha 21164 400
Digital AlphaStation 500/333 12.5 9.8 Alpha 21164 333
SGI Indigo2 12.5 8.9 R10000 200
Sun Ultra 2 Model 1200 11.4 7.7 UltraSPARC-I 200
-------------------------------------------------------------
Note: table is ordered by descending SPECfp95
The AlphaStation 500/500 forms a new high-end to the AlphaStation 500
models, and as such shares much of the attributes of other
AlphaStation 500 workstations.
The system comes standard with 2MB of secondary level cache, as found
in the AlphaStation 500/400. However, to achive even higher levels of
performance, the AlphaStation 500/500 also has an 8MB cache option
available.
The AlphaStation 500/500 with 2MB of cache, 128MB of memory, 2GB disk
drive, 21" monitor, PowerStorm 4D60T, 4MB of texture memory, floppy,
CD-ROM, keyboard, mouse and Windows NT Workstation licence is
$US54,660.
The AlphaStation 500/500 is reported by Digital to be available from
September 1996, with the 8MB cache option coming sometime in the
fourth quarter of 1996.
New PowerStorm Graphics
-----------------------
In March of this year Digital announced a new family of graphics
known as PowerStorm. Digital has recently announced additional
adapters for the PowerStorm line.
Of the three adapters announced, the 4D40T, 4D50T and the high-end
4D60T, the 4D60T was announced in March, but it was not expected to
ship until the middle of 1996, and little performance or pricing
information was available at the time.
The three adapters come into the high-end of the PowerStorm graphics
adapter range. The table below outlines the major features of the
three adapters.
---------------------------------------------------------------
4D40T 4D50T 4D60T
---------------------------------------------------------------
Price ($US) $3,995 $7,995 $11,995
Resolution (up to) 1280x1024 1280x1024 1600x1280
Color planes 24-bit DB 24-bit DB 24-bit DB
Overlay planes 4-bit 4-bit 8-bit
Z-buffer planes 24-bit 24-bit 32-bit
ViewPerf CDRS-03 22.40 41.90 46.51
ViewPerf DX-03 6.54 9.07 11.15
ViewPerf DRV-02 3.67 4.86 5.22
---------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------
Texture Memory Pricing
----------------------
4MB $US595
16MB $US2,495
32MB $US4,995
----------------------
The PowerStorm 4D60T graphics adapter offers similar levels of
performance to Silicon Graphics' Maximum IMPACT graphics option found
on SGI's Indigo2 workstation. The table below compares the
performance of PowerStorm 4D60T vs Indigo2 Maximum IMPACT graphics.
------------------------------------------
Benchmark PowerStorm Maximum
4D60T IMPACT
------------------------------------------
ViewPerf CDRS-03 46.51 47.67
ViewPerf DX-03 11.15 9.54
ViewPerf DRV-02 5.22 6.72
------------------------------------------
Digital did not disclose what workstation was used in conjunction
with the PowerStorm adapter to post this level of performance.
However, it is likely to be the new workstation with a 500MHz Alpha
processor, employing 8MB of secondary level cache. Silicon Graphics
has used an Indigo2 with an R10000 200MHz processor. The exception
being CDRS-03 47.67. This was achieved with a 250MHz R4400 processor.
The Viewperf series of benchmarks are a portable OpenGL performance
benchmark programs written in C. It was developed by IBM. Later
updates and significant contributions were made by SGI, Digital and
other OPC project group members. Currently, the program runs on most
implementations of UNIX, Windows NT, Windows95, and OS/2. The
following is a brief description of the three Viweperf tests featured
in the table above.
CDRS-03 - contains seven different Viewperf tests, is a modeling and
rendering application for computer-aided industrial design.
DX-03 - has 10 different tests, is a visualization application.
DRV-02 - has 10 different tests, is a 3D computer model review
package.
Availability
------------
Digital has announced that the three graphics adapters will be
available September 1996.
******************************************************************
IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE ALERT IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE
IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE ALERT IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE
IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE ALERT IDEAS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE
################################################################
# The attached information is provided by IDEAS International #
# as part of their industry research services and is intended #
# for the internal use only of the recipient company. #
# #
# Copyright remains with IDEAS International and further #
# distribution/forwarding/modification outside of the scope #
# of your agreement with IDEAS International is prohibited. #
# #
# The information contained in this document has been #
# researched and compiled from sources believed to be #
# reliable at the time of writing, but is not warranted as #
# being correct in any way by IDEAS International Pty. Ltd #
################################################################
--------------------------------------------------------
Phone: +612 9482 8900 Fax: +612 9482 8877
[email protected] http://www.ideasinternational.com
--------------------------------------------------------
I D E A S Suite 18
============= 14 Edgeworth David Ave
International Hornsby NSW Australia
--------------------------------------------------------
* Computer Industry Analysts *
* Competitive Profiles System Selection *
--------------------------------------------------------
|
4770.10 | It just keeps getting worse...this is horrible... | WRKSYS::ROLLA | | Tue Aug 27 1996 17:15 | 6 |
|
AlphaStation 500 no longer fastest desktop workstation....
Now it's the fastest uni-processor on the planet.
|
4770.11 | | tennis.ivo.dec.com::TENNIS::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Tue Aug 27 1996 18:45 | 6 |
| This doesn't look good. From a customer's prespective Digital had to go
to 500 Mhz to beat a 180 Mhz. Digital doesn't have much head room but HP
seems to have lots of room for growth to 500 Mhz. I can already
anticipate the questions at the next quarterly Business Partner Update.
The response will be - UM???? cuz I won't get any appropriate messages
from Corporate.
|
4770.12 | Mega Hertz versus Mega Avis | MPGS::HAMNQVIST | Video servers eng. | Tue Aug 27 1996 19:16 | 20 |
| | This doesn't look good. From a customer's prespective Digital had to go
| to 500 Mhz to beat a 180 Mhz.
This is like comparing Gas RPMs against Diesel RPMs. Anyone who
compares MHz accross computing platforms, or even CPU generations,
for the purpose of determining speed, is nuts. Treat MHz as part of
the model number, nothing else.
Compare the machines using industry standard benchmarks, for example.
If HP can run "X" clonks per clink with glow plugs and we can do a
bit better, for less money, who cares about the MHz.
The only thing that would possibly create a question in people's mind
is if 500MHz is somehow near some theoretical limit and that HP, for
that reason, can easily grow from 180 to 500 using proven technology
while we have to break serious new ground. I am not a HW guy, but I
suspect that the difficulties of doubling the 180 versus our 500 may
have little to do with the clock itself.
>Per
|
4770.13 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Tue Aug 27 1996 21:23 | 8 |
| re: Note 4770.11 by tennis.ivo.dec.com::TENNIS::KAM
Have your customer ask HP how many watts a PA-8000 would run at if they
could get it to work at 500Mhz.
Don't assume 500Mhz is a limit for EV56.
-Bruce
|
4770.14 | Perception? | RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Tue Aug 27 1996 22:13 | 16 |
| > This is like comparing Gas RPMs against Diesel RPMs. Anyone who
Could be but If I make up a chart that looks like this, obviously ours has
to work harder and theirs has more of a future.
CPU | MFM* | Clock
=========:=============:===============
Ours | 100 | 500 Mhz
---------+-------------+---------------
Theirs | 100 | 180 Mhz
---------+-------------+---------------
* Meaningless Figure of Merit or "industry standard benchmark" depending on
how you look at it.
mikeP
|
4770.15 | | BIGUN::chmeee::Mayne | Dag. | Wed Aug 28 1996 04:17 | 33 |
| More like ignorance.
If HP (or Intel, or Sun) could run their CPUs at 500MHz, don't you think they
would? "Yes, we can run at 500MHz, but we're artificially crippling our product
line because we enjoy the competition". And if they did suddenly multiply their
clock speed by 3, would their bus, memory, and disks do the same?
The simple explanation (and it's *very* simple) is that Alpha has chosen to do
simple instructions quickly, whereas others have chosen to do more complicated
instructions more slowly (speed demon vs brainiac, I believe are the cute
names).
Because Alpha's instructions are simple, they can, and do, go faster. But
because they are simpler, they can do less.
Because PA-RISC's (x86's, etc) instructions are more complicated, they can do
more, but they can't be executed as quickly.
When it all comes out in the wash, different trade-offs end up giving roughly
the same performance, with Alpha arguably coming out ahead.
Other things also apply. For instance, PA-RISC does instruction reordering,
whereas Alpha doesn't. If Alpha did, it might go faster for no increase in clock
speed.
In summary, our's *isn't* working harder, it's working differently. Their's
doesn't have more (or less) of a future, because it's working differently.
As .12 says, comparing MHz between architectures is nuts.
If you want better explanations, go to the DEChips conference.
PJDM
|
4770.16 | MegaHertz ShmegaHertz | WRKSYS::ROLLA | | Wed Aug 28 1996 09:37 | 3 |
| re:.11 Who said anything about MHz?
Spec fp and int DOMINATION amongst uni's.
|
4770.17 | it's a joke. it's only a joke. | R2ME2::DEVRIES | Mark DeVries | Wed Aug 28 1996 10:02 | 11 |
| re: our 500 MHz vs. their 180 MHz, and "working harder"
Just tell the customer that our machine is a RISC (Reduced Interval Slice
Computer) -- that We've got smaller hertz than Them, so our hertz run
faster. Gee, they bought the reduced instruction set thing, didn't
they? :-) :-)
-Mark
P.S. Be sure to spell it out -- so they don't think you said our
computer is a risk!
|
4770.18 | Its the MARKETING stupid.... | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Wed Aug 28 1996 11:35 | 39 |
| I'm a software guy. I don't really know much about the details presented in
the last few replies. I don't know who's right or wrong. I hate to say it
but I don't think I care.
But what did mean something to me was .14. Here it is again:
>
> CPU | MFM* | Clock
> =========:=============:===============
> Ours | 100 | 500 Mhz
> ---------+-------------+---------------
> Theirs | 100 | 180 Mhz
> ---------+-------------+---------------
> * Meaningless Figure of Merit or "industry standard benchmark" depending on
> how you look at it.
Real simple, and very clear that Thiers is better because it does the same
work with less 'something'(MHZ in this case).
Right or wrong doesn't matter. Its how the customers percieve it.
Competition will run ads like this and sell boxes. Lots of them. Much more
than us.
We will hit them with lots of techie talk. Probably all correct, no
lies/deception. We will sell some boxes to those customers that have techies
writing the POs. Big deal.
That table from .14 is called marketing. As I have said before, we don't do
it. Never have. Our competition does. We may have the superior products
but if the competition has better marketing (any marketing) they'll win the
sales. I can only hope our marketing people don't think like the folks
authoring the previous replies. Not that I think the previous replies are
good/bad/right/wrong.
Brad
|
4770.19 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Wed Aug 28 1996 12:09 | 11 |
4770.20 | 500MHz really is the internal processor speed | GEMEVN::GLOSSOP | Alpha: Voluminously challenged | Wed Aug 28 1996 12:24 | 3 |
| Yes, 500MHz is the processor internal clock speed (i.e. dependent add
instructions can issue at 2ns intervals, and the theoretical peak
for the "perfect" instruction mix is ~2BIPS.)
|
4770.21 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Aug 28 1996 12:48 | 24 |
| Re several:
Fred, we actually clock the Alpha chip with a clock signal
that's substantially *SLOWER* than the internal on-chip
clocks. When we say "500 MHz", that's the internal chip
speed. This is pretty consistent across the entire industry.
(Most external clocks are 33 MHz or some multiple. This is
handy because it cycles the PCI bus at its top speed. Then,
a phase-locked-loop on-chip then synchronously multiplies
the clock frequency. The actual multiplication factor for
Alpha is set by SROM code (firmware).)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
With regard to slower-but-bigger Hertz (e.g., PA RISC) versus
faster-but-smaller Hertz (e.g., Alpha), this is often referred
to as "slow tick" versus "fast tick" architectures and yes, it's
been discussed extensively and heatedly in RICKS::DECHIPS. If
you don't already have this conference in your notebook and
would like to add it, press <KP7> or <Select> or type "SELECT"
and the conference will be added to your notebook.
Atlant
|
4770.22 | What does it take? | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Wed Aug 28 1996 12:59 | 49 |
| Gosh, aren't we good at spreading the SPECfoo95/MHz FUD!
It's about as meaningful as SPECfp95/bit (we have been shipping
64-bit UNIX, our compeition is talking about "outlining" their
64-bit strategy. Since we've got twice the bits, clearly we are
losing the SPECfp95/bit race!
It's like the people who claim the Pentium PRO 166 is the "slowest"
Pentium PRO. No, it's not. The Pentium PRO 166 with 512KB L2 cache
can be *faster* than the Pentium PRO 200 with 256K L2 cache. (See
the large number of TPC results published for the 166MHz/512KB and
the lack of results for 200MHz/256KB.) But of course, the P6/166
loses at SPECint95/MB-cache metric, another absolutely meaningless
metric.
Many technical customers accept that SPECint95 and SPECfp95 are metrics
that mean something.
It should be *trivial* to explain that SPECint95/MHz and SPECfp95/MHz
means *nothing* to these customers. (If you really need a marketeer
to help you explain that what are you doing in this business?) It
should be *trivial* to explain that only a marketeer could attempt
to convince a techincal customer to use such a meaningless metric
as SPECfp95/MHz as a "selling" point.
But a simple analogy for here.
A car race. All the rules are laid out, and whoever finishes
the race first wins.
But after losing the race, the 2nd place finisher says "but see,
I really won the race based on the speed/cylinder, since the winner
was driving a V12 and I was driving a V8." Implicit assumption -
next year they'll be driving a V12.
Finally.
I've got news for you. Talk with some people who work for our
competitors. The news that we are sooooo damn fast at SPECint95
and SPECfp95 is admired by them, but also greated with groans
at HP, Sun, IBM and SGI (and even Intel).
Who would have thought that such great news could be answered with
groans at Digital?
-mr. bill
|
4770.23 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Wed Aug 28 1996 13:12 | 8 |
| The 166/512 is the slowest PPro for servers. The desktop-based 150/256
isn't being made anymore anyhow.
The TPC/C NT numbers on the 4100 (with the fastest Alpha - 400Mhz -
Digital currently offers in a server) couldn't beat the 166 PPro
based servers, so they don't get published, eh?. And yet you
complain that there's no 200 PPro server numbers?
K
|
4770.24 | | tennis.ivo.dec.com::TENNIS::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Wed Aug 28 1996 13:23 | 19 |
| re .22 What does it take? MARKETING and it been worn out in this
notesfile over and over again.
I suggest that you go back and re-read .18. PERCEPTION IS EVERYTHING
and it looks like DEC has to work 2.77 times harder than an HP system
e.g, 500MHz vs. 180MHz.
Every quarter when we meet with the Business Partner's and display a
chart showing 500 vs. 180 and performance is marginally different it
starts all over again. And we're dealing with individuals that were
mostly engineers or have engineering backgrounds. The Competition
might be admiring DEC back in their facility but on the street they're
eating out lunch with FUD.
The word is: what engineering efforts does it take to design, develop,
and deliver a system at 500MHz vs. 200MHz - A LOT more effort. Things
are more complicated at 500MHz. When HP is delivering systems at
500MHz DEC will be at 1000GHz. Therefore, if your microwave breaks
just use your Personal Workstation until it's repaired.
|
4770.25 | Overlap - need the cost factor | SKIBUM::GASSMAN | | Wed Aug 28 1996 13:34 | 10 |
| What it really comes down to is speed per dollar since most don't buy
the fastest that is made, but only the fastest they can afford. It's
rare to see prices in performance studies, or to see the systems
configured the same. I saw one performance study Digital did that had
our machine configured with two ethernet cards to the competition's one
ethernet card - in a web-server test. It's getting very confusing
trying to figure out if one should suggest a dual Pentium Pro 200 or an
AlphaServer 400 or 1000.
bill
|
4770.26 | PA-7200 - Announced 140MHz, First ship 100MHz, last ship 120MHz | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Wed Aug 28 1996 14:12 | 28 |
| re: PERCEPTION IS EVERYTHING
The last similar run around was the panic about "what if HP could
run a PA-7200 at >>140MHz, if they matched our >200MHz we'd be in
real trouble!" (Back then it was SPECfoo92/MHz that was the
meaningless metric.)
Recent history lesson.
HP announced the PA-7200 chip at 140MHz.
They shipped their first PA-7200 system at 100MHz.
They will ship their last PA-7200 system at 120MHz.
Makes the old worry about the PA-7200 running at >200MHz seem kind of
silly, doesn't it?
What makes you believe that the PA-8000 will be any different this time?
(If you have credible information that the PA-8000 is going to be going
out anytime soon at greater than 180MHz, let alone much much greater
than 180MHz, please share. Please include a source for the cache that
goes with it. Otherwise, I'm more inclined to assume that HP is having
enough work right now with rumored thermal issues with the 180MHz
PA-8000, it's cache, and the Visualize-48XP graphics in
a desktop box.)
-mr. bill
|
4770.27 | With due respect... | WIBBIN::NOYCE | Pulling weeds, pickin' stones | Wed Aug 28 1996 18:42 | 18 |
| Re .24
> The word is: what engineering efforts does it take to design, develop,
> and deliver a system at 500MHz vs. 200MHz - A LOT more effort.
Nonsense. Nothing outside the microprocessor (and the little device that
wiggles its clock inputs) sees anything approaching 500 MHz. The cache loop
runs at something closer to 60 MHz (that is, PC speeds). (I'm sure some HW
folks can supply the exact rate). The memory bus even slower.
Do you have any idea of the hoops HP jumps through to run its processor at
180 MHz? (Hint -- there's no on-chip cache.)
Perhaps we should quote SPECfp95 per package pin -- HP needs a lot more pins
to get the same level of performance. This is a metric that actually relates
(marginally) to a real cost.
Of course, price and availability are what really matter to the customer.
Pundits have been saying "Alpha can't maintain its lead" -- but it has.
|
4770.28 | | BIGUN::chmeee::Mayne | Dag. | Wed Aug 28 1996 19:32 | 6 |
| Has anybody, over the last few years, kept track of CPU announced release dates
and performances, and actual release dates and performances?
It might make an interesting chart.
PJDM
|
4770.29 | Let's get the whole picture... | GEMEVN::GLOSSOP | Alpha: Voluminously challenged | Wed Aug 28 1996 20:14 | 1 |
| And how about end-user price and price/perf to go with it...
|
4770.30 | That was my point! | RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Wed Aug 28 1996 20:30 | 9 |
| >Right or wrong doesn't matter. Its how the customers percieve it.
That was my point Brad. Thanks. Thanks too for:
>That table from .14 is called marketing. As I have said before, we don't do
Maybe I've found a new line of work. Nah. Probably not.
mikeP
|
4770.31 | Listen carefully. You CAN understand this. | PERFOM::HENNING | | Wed Aug 28 1996 21:19 | 16 |
| OK it's like this
It sits on a desktop
It occupies a space slightly bigger than a briefcase
It is faster than the refrigerator-sized beasties from the competitors
You say you can't sell it, because the chip is 500 MHz vs. their
nearly-as-fast 200 MHz system.
I say fine, please go sell shoes.
Please don't try to sell Alphas.
You say only a technoweenie would understand that its the fastest.
Fine. Sign me
/technoweenie and proud of it
|
4770.32 | | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Wed Aug 28 1996 23:13 | 14 |
|
most will buy on emotion NOT logic, therfore .14/.18/.26/.30 hit the nail
on the head it's the perception.../marketing that has always won
in the end...
why do you think microsoft/intel are number 1 in there field...
marketing/perception...
others may have a better product but WITHOUT perception/marketing
it doesn't mean squat to the people who buy cause 90% buy based on
emotion NOT logic...
IMO
|
4770.33 | facts count too. | PERFOM::HENNING | | Thu Aug 29 1996 08:46 | 6 |
| perceptions are real
but so are facts
One might almost gather that the naysayers in this stream would prefer
not to have to bother with the inconvenient fact that Alpha is fastest.
|
4770.34 | PC-centric Readily Accept 500 MHz as Goodness | NQOS02::nqsrv129.nqo.dec.com::SLOUGH | Dennis Slough; Novi, MI dtn 471-5154 | Thu Aug 29 1996 09:22 | 13 |
| My experience is that many customers never get past megahertz, ie. DEC is
delivering 500 MHz (best) while others are at only 200 MHz or less. I don't
go into the other details unless I see a glimmer of comprehension in their
eyes. Otherwise we do our best to go straight to discussions on applications
and benefits.
If they've taken the time to listen to HP's fud regarding microprocessor clock
rates they'll spend a few minutes listening to the other side of the story.
I appreciate this string and others on the topic here and in DECCHIPS because
it prepares me with answers to their questions.
D.
|
4770.35 | May be they can use *2* 6-cyl engines *cost-effectively* | HELIX::SONTAKKE | | Thu Aug 29 1996 10:07 | 9 |
| The analogy about 6cyl vs 12 cyl:-
Haven't we started to qualify *our* claims with the addition of
*uniprocessor* ? How is this different then?
If our competitors can approach our performance by using SMP, then we
should not be talking about unfair comparison.
- Vikas
|
4770.36 | I guess engineers just don't get it... | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:01 | 21 |
| or 'Why engineers shouldn't be marketeers'
RE .33
> One might almost gather that the naysayers in this stream would prefer
> not to have to bother with the inconvenient fact that Alpha is fastest.
Perhaps I'm one of the naysayers? I don't really mean to be. Anyways,
the fact that ALPHA is fastest/best/pick_your_superlative is great, but
I think companies like Intel and Microsoft have proven that you don't
need to have the best product to take over a market. Although it does
make it easier, alone it gets you almost nowhere.
We may have the best chip and the best boxes but if the customers are buying
HPs then it just doesn't matter. We need to focus on _convincing_ the
customers that our products are the best regardless of whether they are or
not. I know it doesn't sound good but that is business, IMO.
|
4770.37 | (Concept collision with .36) | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:02 | 10 |
| > One might almost gather that the naysayers in this stream would prefer
> not to have to bother with the inconvenient fact that Alpha is fastest.
One of {Ferrari|Lamborghini|Masserati} are probably the
fastest, too. But I'd rather own the {Honda}Toyota|Nissan|
Volkswagenwerk} corporation than any of them.
Fast is fine. But cheap and easy to understand sells.
Atlant
|
4770.38 | another analogy... | SALEM::ADEY | I rewired it! | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:13 | 5 |
| I use Windows 95 on my desktops because is does what I need and costs
$90. Is Windows NT better and OpenVMS the best? Yes, but what do THEY
cost?
Ken....
|
4770.39 | best? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1) | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:13 | 10 |
| re Note 4770.36 by PATRLR::MCCUSKER:
> I think companies like Intel and Microsoft have proven that you don't
> need to have the best product to take over a market.
Alternatively, the success of Intel and Microsoft may show
that our conventional notions of what constitutes "best" are
wrong.
Bob
|
4770.40 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:21 | 17 |
|
Best for what?
Personal productivity tools? Get a Mac.
Personal productivity tools, wide selection of of system vendors, and
wide selection of offbeat/free/hobbiest software? Get anything that
runs Windows 3.1/DOS/Windows 95.
Almost everything above in a more expensive package, with some long
term potential? Windows NT
A traditional multiuser production environment? Get VMS.
A 3D workstation? Get UNIX on SGI ;-)
|
4770.41 | Now IBM selling AS/400s is marketing... | GLDX02::ALLBERY | Jim | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:22 | 20 |
| re: .32
>> why do you think microsoft/intel are number 1 in there field...
>> marketing/perception...
Well, that and a ***TREMENDOUS*** amount of luck. Where would
Microsoft be today if Gary Killdall (sp?) hadn't blown off IBM when
they wanted to license CPM-86 for their new PC. What IBM had
decided to go with a chip other than the 8088? Both companies have
done a good job in capitalizing on their good fortune, but the
initial good fortune was not created by virtue of their marketing
acumen.
That doesn't mean Digital doesn't need to vastly improve its
marketing ability.
My 2 cents,
Jim
|
4770.42 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:29 | 16 |
| > Well, that and a ***TREMENDOUS*** amount of luck. Where would
> Microsoft be today if Gary Killdall (sp?) hadn't blown off IBM when
> they wanted to license CPM-86 for their new PC. What IBM had
> decided to go with a chip other than the 8088? Both companies have
> done a good job in capitalizing on their good fortune, but the
> initial good fortune was not created by virtue of their marketing
> acumen.
Well, at least Bill Gates had the good sense to change the
name of the operating system he bought from "QDOS" ("Quick
and Dirty Operating System") to just plain "DOS".
We sold an operating system called "P/OS". Many thought,
fairly or not, that it was.
Atlant
|
4770.43 | | PATRLR::MCCUSKER | | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:42 | 8 |
| RE .41 about the luck of Microsoft and Intel
My point exactly. Both comapnies overtook a market
without neccessarily having a _superior_ product,
(whatever the heck that is).
Just ask Motorola/Apple.
(Yeah, but the Mac is better ;^))
|
4770.44 | Nothing hidden behind the single CPU curtain.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:57 | 50 |
| re: 4770.34 by Vikas Sontakke
| The analogy about 6cyl vs 12 cyl:
| Haven't we started to qualify *our* claims with the addition of
| *uniprocessor* ? How is this different then?
You are somewhat correct.
You will find *no* SPECint95 faster than the AlphaStation 500/500.
No matter how many CPU's you put in a box.
For SPECfp95, there are indeed faster systems available.
They are:
Digital AlphaServer 4100 5/300 (4)
Sun Enterprise 6000/12
Digital AlphaServer 8x00 5/300 (>4)
Digital AlphaServer 8x00 5/350 (>4)
Digital AlphaServer 8x00 5/440 (>6)
You'll see *one* system *not* from Digital that beats the
AlphaStation 500/500. All of the above systems cost quite
a bit more.
Honestly, someday HP will submit multiprocessor PA-8000 SPECfp95
results. But they have not yet done so. But when they do they
may not take number one away from us with any of their current
(only up to 4 CPU) PA-8000 systems.
(And finally, for what it's worth. No desktop system, no matter
how many CPU's are in it, pizza box or mini-tower, has a higher
SPECint95/SPECfp95 than the AlphaStation 500/500.)
Why talk about single CPU performance? Tongue-in-cheek reason:
To give some of our competitors a sporting chance.
With current results, we take 9 of the top 10 if we don't restrict
to single CPU. Sun places 8th with the Enterprise 600/12. Restricting
to a single CPU, we only take 6 of the top 10. Today HP grabs 2nd, 3rd
and 4th with the PA-8000s, and SGI with the Power Challenge R10000
[2MB L2] grabs 9th.
The more serious answer - because some technical customers know that
their application is best characterized by uni-processor performance.
They know that throwing more CPUs at the problem gains them little if
anything for their application.
-mr. bill
|
4770.45 | This is true. | RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Thu Aug 29 1996 12:21 | 20 |
| > <<< Note 4770.33 by PERFOM::HENNING >>>
> -< facts count too. >-
> perceptions are real
> but so are facts
> One might almost gather that the naysayers in this stream would prefer
> not to have to bother with the inconvenient fact that Alpha is fastest.
Facts are facts. I'm not arguing facts. I'm aguing what sells.
If I'm about to purchase based on what I've heard, I want you to walk into
my office with nothing but your uh er hat in your hand and convince me
quickly and efficiently that your machine is best. My time is valuable.
By the way you should probably be the last presenter on my list for it to
stick but that's a problem you can't well control.
mikeP
|
4770.46 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a [email protected] | Thu Aug 29 1996 12:24 | 10 |
| RE: .40
>>A 3D workstation? Get UNIX on SGI ;-)
That's rapidly turning into "Get a DEC (sic) Alpha
running Windows NT" Especially if it's an Alphastation 500/500.
We turned alot of heads at SIGGRAPH from what I've been reading.
mike
|
4770.47 | apology | PERFOM::HENNING | | Thu Aug 29 1996 12:43 | 15 |
| > By the way you should probably be the last presenter on my list for it to
> stick but that's a problem you can't well control.
Thanks :-)
Seriously ... I should like to apologize if my remarks in this notes
stream have been taken as personally insulting to any individual.
I am not saying that the perceptions are not real. It just seemed like
there was insufficient attention being paid to the little fact that
Alpha's first place (at X MHz vs. competitor's second place at Y MHz) is
STILL FIRST PLACE.
Thanks for listening.
/john
|
4770.48 | 3D? Get Digital | WRKSYS::DOTY | Russ Doty, Graphics and Multimedia | Thu Aug 29 1996 13:41 | 39 |
| re: A 3D workstation? Get UNIX on SGI :-)
Or an Alpha with PowerStorm running UNIX...
Or an Alpha with PowerStorm running Windows NT...
The new PowerStorm 4DT graphics (announced at SIGGRAPH) have better
capabilities than SGI, better performance than SGI, and lower (much!)
cost than SGI.
We have a $4,000 graphics card that does true color double buffered,
high performance 3D, and supports up to 32 MB of texture memory. The
$13,000 SGI High Impact graphics card does 16 bit color/alpha double
buffered, and supports a maximum of 4MB of texture memory.
Our top of the line PowerStorm 4D60T priced at $12,000, and is
delivering graphics performance identical to or better than the $23,000
SGI Maximum Impact. The 4D60T also supports 1600x1200 resolution,
while the Maximum Impact is limited to 1280x1024.
The AlphaStation 500/400 and 500/500 are delivering much better
application level performance than the SGI systems. One of the
demonstrations at SIGGRAPH was a visual simulation of a F1 racetrack.
This simulation was running at high resolution and fully texture
mapped. I don't know how they did it, but a 500/500 and 4D60T
combination was getting over 30 frames per second -- the engineer
developing this commented that this was twice the frame rate that they
were getting from their SGI Reality Engine2.
Much of the 3D world is moving to NT -- this was the strongest trend at
this years SIGGRAPH. SGI has been claiming that no NT system can do
real 3D graphics, publishing ViewPerf benchmark numbers to support this
claim... Alpha/PowerStorm systems running NT blow away the SGI numbers.
This time around, Digital is actually on the leading edge of the
next revolution, and is in an excellent position to exploit these new
developments.
Russell Doty
PowerStorm 4DT Product Manager
|
4770.49 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Aug 29 1996 14:10 | 24 |
| Russell:
> > re: A 3D workstation? Get UNIX on SGI :-)
>
> Or an Alpha with PowerStorm running UNIX...
> Or an Alpha with PowerStorm running Windows NT...
>
> The new PowerStorm 4DT graphics (announced at SIGGRAPH) have better
> capabilities than SGI, better performance than SGI, and lower (much!)
> cost than SGI.
How much of the vast base of SGI software has been ported to Alpha?
Is it at rev-parity with the SGI versions?
How much is in the process of being ported?
What's not being ported?
Atlant
P.S.: I honestly don't know the answers to these questions, but
I know they're questions any Mac- or SGI-based shop would
certainly ask before they even let you in the door.
|
4770.50 | CPU Info Center | STAR::jacobi.zko.dec.com::jacobi | Paul A. Jacobi - OpenVMS Systems Group | Thu Aug 29 1996 14:42 | 6 |
| http://infopad.eecs.berkeley.edu/CIC/ is a good source for CPU benchmark
information accross the industry.
-Paul
|
4770.51 | Good starting point for applications | WRKSYS::DOTY | Russ Doty, Graphics and Multimedia | Thu Aug 29 1996 14:56 | 59 |
| Excellent questions! In fact, the very questions we were asking
ourselves several months ago. As a reference, we announced the
PowerStorm 4DT on August 6, and will be volume shipping in
mid-September.
Now, relative to SGI and applications...
First, we are in much better shape than SGI on NT applications ;-)
(As a reference, I'm running on my desktop an Alpha with a 4D40T and
Windows NT. I run most of the target applications and demonstrations,
plus MS-Office, Corel Draw, Netscape, Access, MS Project, etc. Not
only can I run Intel apps (FX!32), but Intel apps that use OpenGL run
with fill hardware graphics acceleration!)
We targeted 3D technical applications. We have had hardware on site
for several months with active testing and optimization at the key
ISV's, and have begun the formal qualification and certification
process, with the goal of having applications certified by FRS.
Mechanical CAD
Pro/Engineering by PTC
Unigraphics by EDS
Euclid by Matra Datavision
SDRC
Computervision
We have done some testing with Bentley MicroStation.
Visual Computing
AVS
OpenInventor by Portable Graphics
World Toolkit by Sense8
Vrealm (VRML) Builder and Browser by IDS
Entertainment
SoftImage (extensive work with them; EXCELLENT opportunities here)
Lightwave3D by Newtek
And, since the PowerStorm 4DT series uses the same interfaces as all of
our other graphics (OpenGL and either X-windows/Motif or Win32), all
applications that run on Alpha will run with PowerStorm 4DT.
We believe -- based on market trends -- that the biggest growth
opportunities lie with WindowsNT. Virtually all of the new
applications development we are familiar with is originating in the NT
space, and SGI has no presence in NT.
SGI does have a number of applications that we don't. We are going
after most of these applications. The vast majority of these application
vendors are either moving to NT or adding support for NT. Many of them
are responsive to the Digital NT story (both Intel and Alpha).
So, application availability is the most critical question to ask. We
have the core applications we need to succeed, we have more work to do,
and I believe we are in amazingly good shape for a brand new product
that has not even shipped yet!
(also: If you know of any critical applications that we should be
targeting, send me mail.)
|
4770.52 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Thu Aug 29 1996 19:22 | 13 |
|
Stick 'em in the arse with a fork, without a ;-) and see what it gets
us... a serious argument about DEC vs SGI as a new rathole under the
wrong topic ;-)
Oh well. We'll own the 3D desktop in 3 years. ;-0 Nah, we'll spin
the business off if it looks like a threat to SGI ;^)
You guys are way too serious.
'scuse me while I morph out of here.
|
4770.53 | | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG1-2 near pole G17 | Fri Aug 30 1996 14:57 | 26 |
| FWIW, Kinetix (developers of 3D Studio Max) put on hold porting their
application to Alpha. Cadence, a major provider of CAE software,
basically dropped their support for Alpha. Other CAD vendors have
threatened to drop support unless they get a wad of cash. I don't
like this trend, if it is a trend. These can all be dismissed as
just a few, tiny markets, but as a deccie who loves working with
Alphas, 3D and CAD, this hurts.
I saw Alpha boxes being auctioned off on the internet for less
than $1K. If I knew that 3D Max was definitely headed for Alpha, I
might have gone for one. Instead, I've gone with adding another P5
system for about the same cost (rolling my own) because I *know* it
will run all my NT applications, including future applications. This
visible (to me) reticence from some software vendors to support Alpha
makes me shy about buying one for my own general use.
I was enthusiastic about Alpha for 3D work since I see a lot of 3D work
heading toward garage shop outfits and being done on machines and
software that don't require investing a small fortune. I think that is
where a large part of the 3D market is headed. But, I see Intel boxes
as more a threat to SGI than Alpha boxes for 3D in the future. This is
partly because I think the 3D market, small as it is, is headed toward
being more of a high-volume, low-margin market that both SGI and
Digital are unprepared to dominate.
Steve
|
4770.54 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Fri Aug 30 1996 15:20 | 6 |
| ...it should probably be mentioned that Kinetix canned
3D Studio Max after evaluating Alpha's performance relative
to P6 boxes.
Time for DS to throw some money at them.
Kratz
|
4770.55 | zero for two | JHAXP::VULLO | Simplify & Deliver | Fri Aug 30 1996 15:29 | 18 |
| On 2 different contracts this year for 2 different companies
I looked into using an Alpha as a server for intranet applications.
In both cases Alpha lost because there was not an Alpha version
of some piece of software we needed.
Yes, there may be nn,nnn products ported to Alpha, but there always
seem to be one or two other critical programs that haven't been
ported, so the whole house of cards falls and we use an Intel box.
When you are arguing about performance you are just polishing turds.
To munge up a phrase from the last US presidential election:
"Its the _applications_, stupid."
-Vin
|
4770.56 | | GEMEVN::GLOSSOP | Alpha: Voluminously challenged | Fri Aug 30 1996 16:00 | 31 |
| Low volume: moving from "threatened" to "endangered".
Our hardware-centric management has frequently seemed to come up short
with respect to software in the past. (Back in the mid-80s there were
questions about how to make our software development environment succeed.
One response [which was ignored] was competitive price/performance
platforms with our competitors at the time [e.g. Sun]. There was
a substantial "price and price/perf gap" for many, many years.)
Things are really no different now, except we've going from "enslaving"
(extract profit, volume-limiting, under-investing in) our own software
(which we were capable of doing at the time), to being incapable
of providing platforms where ISVs now see this (correctly) as an externality.
If you were an ISV, why on earth would *YOU* want to port to a very
low volume, very high priced platform when you could sell 10x or more
on higher volume platforms?? Why bother with a tiny niche platform??
At one point, it looked to ISVs that Digital was actually serious about
making Alpha NT a reasonable volume platform such that a wide variety
of ISVs might find it interesting. It has become painfully evident
to them that in fact Digital is NOT persuing a strategy that has systems
that are either price and/or price/performance competitive with Pentium Pro
(for example), and are NOT going to come close to achieving even a small
fraction of the volume (unless something changes radically, and based
on a dozen years of history, the ISVs have ZERO reason to believe that
such a radical change will happen.) This is a classic *negative* feedback
loop where ISVs are halting or withdrawing products in a number of cases.
Volume is NOT a cure-all to be sure. However, lack of it (and obvious
lack of pursuit of it) means that you don't even get into the game
for the long term.
|
4770.57 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Fri Aug 30 1996 16:01 | 10 |
| Re: .55
Did you contact the FX!32 people to see if they could work those
problems?
There's nothing new about application vendors demanding big bucks to
port their software. They see a way to make major money and they try
it. That's another reason FX!32 is important, because it reduces
their leverage.
|
4770.58 | another view | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Fri Aug 30 1996 16:09 | 5 |
| ...or FX!32 will give ISV's *less* incecentive to port a native
version to Alpha, since the Alpha users can always run the x86/32
image under FX!32 and Digital, not the ISV, then gets to shell out
the bucks to support it when it is run under FX!32.
Kratz
|
4770.59 | Super Mario Brothers in 3D | STAR::jacobi.zko.dec.com::jacobi | Paul A. Jacobi - OpenVMS Systems Group | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:38 | 26 |
| >>> This is partly because I think the 3D market, small as it is, is
>>> headed toward being more of a high-volume, low-margin market that both
>>> SGI and Digital are unprepared to dominate.
Yes, I see this happening, too!
Microsoft is pushing 3D into the genaric PC systems in the form of
Direct-3D API, for use in video games. Microsoft is targeting the 3D PC
against "console" game systems, like Sega Saturn, which support dedicated
3D hardware.
The PCI S3-virge 3D cards are available now for about $150.00. The
"serious" 3D folks laugh at the Virge performance, but sales of a bazillion
cards will fund the next generation. Almost every video card manufacturer
is preparing low-cost 3D cards for Microsoft's Direct-3D API.
The drop in RAM prices will also make an 8Mb VRAM card more affordable,
where half of the VRAM can be used for 3D buffering.
Unless we have extreamely high performance 3D cards *and* the right
application, we will be over-run by the fast moving PC crowd.
-Paul
|
4770.60 | | WRKSYS::DOTY | Russ Doty, Graphics and Multimedia | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:41 | 20 |
| We are just now entering a new (to us) market: entertainment and
animation.
We have the hottest application -- SoftImage -- running on Alpha,
optimized, and fully supporting our newest graphics (including 3D and
texture mapping). We have the number 2 application, Lightwave 3D,
running, including our newest graphics. We received tremendous
response at SIGGRAPH, including several of the largest animation houses
starting serious conversations and people literally trying to purchase
our demonstration systems off of the show floor. I worked with several
of the SoftImage corporate animators, who are used to high end systems.
They all, without exception, asked "how can I get one of these
systems for my office?" It was kind of fun, watching them get
blown away by the performance of a 400 Mhz Alpha -- and then apologize
for giving them one of our slow workstations!
We don't have a committed port date for 3D Studio Max (the real issues,
ummm, are not technical or performance...). Our recommendation is
to sell SoftImage and Lightwave 3D on Alpha, and 3D Studio Max on
Intel.
|
4770.61 | Its been a long time coming | MASS10::GERRY | Is that NEARLINE enough for you | Sun Sep 01 1996 10:51 | 9 |
| Russ,
I worked with SoftImage at IBC95 last September (i work for CSS) when
they first demonstrated their product (behind locked doors) to their
customers/prospects and they were blown out by a 300Mhz AlphaStation
600, so i can appreciate the feedback you are now getting with 400 and
500 MHz machines.
Gerald Connolly @SBP
|
4770.62 | Digital has great graphics | WRKSYS::DOTY | Russ Doty, Graphics and Multimedia | Sun Sep 01 1996 20:16 | 16 |
| Gerry,
You really need to see these new systems running SoftImage!
In the past, graphics has been the major bottleneck on Digital
workstations -- literally any Alpha processor could over-run our best
graphics. With the new PowerStorm 4DT boards, the PROCESSER is the
bottleneck. Even a 500 Mhz EV5 doesn't max out the graphics (although
it looks like it is getting close).
In addition, the new graphics support shading and up to 32 MB of
texture memory, which SoftImage fully exploits.
My personal belief is that graphics will do for our workstations what
VLM has done for our servers -- provide a clear and compelling reason
to buy Digital systems.
|
4770.63 | | MASS10::GERRY | Is that NEARLINE enough for you | Mon Sep 02 1996 13:57 | 7 |
| Russ,
Well it looked pretty good at 300, I think i saw it at 400 at NAB this
year but with faster graphics i not surprised the SoftImage people are really
impressed!
Gerald
|
4770.64 | Intel's plans for commodity 3D graphics | STAR::JACOBI | Paul A. Jacobi - OpenVMS Development | Tue Sep 03 1996 00:09 | 9 |
|
See the following URL for a peek at Intel plans for commodity 3D
graphics controller targeted for 2H97/98.
http://www.intel.com/pc-supp/platform/gc97/
-Paul
|
4770.65 | Compelling Application Nominees, please! | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Tue Sep 03 1996 10:39 | 25 |
| Read a book called "Accedental Entrepreneurs. About the Boys from
Silicon Valley Who Created an Empire, Fought Off the Japanese and Still
Can't Get a Date". Its a fun, quick read.
The author's point is that every computer architecture needs a
compelling application. If you get one, the other applications
will move too. Compelling is defined as something that many people
need that is only available on your box. (It could just be stunningly
better too.) Apple 1 had Visicalc. IBM PC had Lotus 123. Apple MAC
struggled until it got Desktop Publishing.
Alpha Servers finally found Data Warehousing. With proper brand
marketing, we might be able to keep the lead. We need to establish
the image that Data Warehousing = Alpha. We won't get it done with
Specmark charts.
Alpha workstations haven't found a way to exploit it's 64 bit
exclusive yet. 3-D rendering may be it, but it seems like a small
market segment. 32 bit NT in 64 bits sounds wastefull. It will be a
long time before the market can use 64 bit NT. Success in data warehousing
won't pull the workstation applications.
Wish I knew the answer. Does anyone have a nominee?
|
4770.66 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Sep 03 1996 11:19 | 12 |
| > Read a book called "Accedental Entrepreneurs. About the Boys from
> Silicon Valley Who Created an Empire, Fought Off the Japanese and
> Still Can't Get a Date". Its a fun, quick read.
Make that "Accidental Empires ..." by Robert X. Cringely, the
fellow who for years was the "Info World" gossip columnist.
(The column still runs under his name, but "Bobby and Pammy"
are now ghosted by someone else and lawsuits are underway.)
Cringely has also done a very compelling TV series for
Public Television.
Atlant
|
4770.67 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Sep 03 1996 11:26 | 19 |
| Personally, I think "Data Warehousing " and "VLM" are both
way too esoteric to make it as the compelling apps that save
our butts. Artistic 3D rendering is pretty obscure too�.
I mean, who can't understand and productively use spread-
sheets? Or desktop publishing? Who *CAN* use data warehouses,
VLM data-bases, or 3D modelling?
Atlant
� In contrast, the introduction of 3D APIs by both Apple
("QuickDraw-3D") and Microsoft mean that lots of pc's will
be rendering 3D under the direct control of applications
programs (and applications programmers) rather than creative
graphic artists. But this is a market where lower performance
3D rendering, well within Intel's capabilities, will probably
be more than sufficient. No need to pay for an Alpha just to
run "Doom, ripped limb-from-limb in 3D!"
|
4770.68 | Lest we forget | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Tue Sep 03 1996 12:57 | 6 |
| >>Who *CAN* use ...VLM data-bases
Well millions of people a day use Alta Vista, and this lead the
competition to throw away their free-of-charge Sun boxes and pay the
asking price for Alphas. They get high on the number of hits, not the
technology underneath.
|
4770.69 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Sep 03 1996 13:18 | 20 |
| > Well millions of people a day use Alta Vista, and this lead the
> competition to throw away their free-of-charge Sun boxes and pay the
> asking price for Alphas. They get high on the number of hits, not the
> technology underneath.
You've answered the rhetorical question that I asked.
So now let's complete the answer: VLM can be productively used
by people/institutions with very large databases. And as we've
seen in the example of Alta Vista, a relatively small server can
service the entire world full of consumers _of_the_database.
And there just aren't that many mega-databases.
So now let's move onto the meta-question: Will VLM sell enough
machines to act as a "Killer App" for Alpha? Or even for 64-bit
computing in general?
For Alpha: I think not. For 64-bit computing: No more than a "Maybe".
Atlant
|
4770.70 | Customers pull applications | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Tue Sep 03 1996 13:39 | 20 |
| > Personally, I think "Data Warehousing " and "VLM" are both
> way too esoteric to make it as the compelling apps that save
> our butts.
How large is the total market for these applications? As a
mainstay of mainframes, Data Warehousing should be a large market.
VLM is a technology. Will data mining and other applications that use VLM
become large before IBM and HP can deliver VLM?
The key to a compelling application is that the customers pull other
applications to the computer architecture. For some customers, data
warehousing and and data mining could be important enough for them to
put heat on other application suppliers. Are we getting this type of
pull for Alpha? Are the application suppliers complying or fighting?
|
4770.71 | a bit a year needed ? | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Tue Sep 03 1996 13:56 | 24 |
| >>>Will data mining and other applications that use VLM
>become large before IBM and HP can deliver VLM?
Well the point is, isn't it, that they are going to have to put their
best blue suits on and iron their ties and explain to their customers
that if they want these nice new applications they will have to migrate
to a 64-bit world. And by the time they have finished doing that, and
getting the know-how and organisation together to do it, the customer
may be thinking, do I need all this? Isn't there someone who has done
this already? And the hard bit for them is, timing when to take the
plunge. Too soon and they lose share to those still pushing the cheap
32-bit boxes. Too late, and Digital extends its lead. Just remember
those Sun boxes going out the window. It gives me a warm glow. my
guess is there will be a shakedown in the 32-bit world and Digital will
thrive in the next 10 years. It would help if we got our management act
together though.
On the question, will VLM sell enough boxes, I think so. It gives a
competitive advantage. Those Sun boxes HAD to go, or the company using
them went. My line is that we have achieved a tremendous amount in the
64-bit world, but that the extent of the achievement is not yet
apparent.
Kevin
|
4770.72 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Tue Sep 03 1996 14:18 | 33 |
| VLM, data mining, data warehousing... are they "killer" apps? Well,
the answer is quite possibly - yes.
A group of companies trying not to be swallowed by Microsoft are trying
to sell a alternate universe than the Windows/Intel one that we seem to
be heading towards.
The group of companies, spearheaded to a great degree by Oracle, have a
view that the new world of the "information superhighway" will be one of
inexpensive clients (see the recent Netscape aliance) which access vast
information - which of course needs to be organized in a manner that it
can be made useful. Anyone who surfs the web can tell you how hard it
is to navigate through a disorganized jumble of hypertext links --
without aids such as AltaVista to provide "some" amount of
organization. Now think of being able to go to a web page that would
allow you to pose interesting "research" questions that might sift
through the terabytes of data floating around -- to determine things
like future market trends. Yup. It might be a killer app.
So, big fast relational databases are a key element of such a universe.
But PC servers are not very interesting.
Now. Quite beyond this new world order, VLM, data mining, and data
warehousing are all very good high margin, low volume business -
which after all is the only business DEC has traditionally succeeded in.
Where DEC is missing the boat is not being the vendor developing the
cheap information appliances... although I've noticed a definite lack
of information flow lately -- for all I know we may actually have plans
to do something with StrongARM. That's where the high-volume,
low-margin product will be.
|
4770.73 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Sep 03 1996 14:39 | 20 |
| > So, big fast relational databases are a key element of such a universe.
> But PC servers are not very interesting.
>
> Now. Quite beyond this new world order, VLM, data mining, and data
> warehousing are all very good high margin, low volume business -
> which after all is the only business DEC has traditionally succeeded in.
Thanks Fred.
I hate to trot out the old, discredited "The world will only need
three computers!" argument, but even if we're talking about tens
of thousands or hundreds of thousands of these VLM data mines,
we're still not taking about a business that will sustain Digital_
as_we-know_it or make Alpha a success.
VLM = Interesting niche, profitable for the smaller and/or nimbler.
But Alpha still needs that killer app.
Atlant
|
4770.75 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Tue Sep 03 1996 15:31 | 18 |
| What was that old diagram... the "Wheel of Re-incarnation" (or
something like that) which showed technology moving in a cycle
between centralized and distributed computing.
I doubt that there is any single product that would provide a
sustainable level of profitability more than a few years. By
being the leader, you get a short grace period before the rest
of the pack leverages your work into a lower margin business.
So. Ask the question, what comes next? And place your bets.
And also ask what business DEC has a credible shot at winning.
Some people are guessing that large distributed database servers,
and cheap clients (sounds a lot like timesharing and terminals ;-)
is the next wave. If you aren't going to build the cheap clients,
then you had better have the software and hardware for the servers.
|
4770.76 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a [email protected] | Tue Sep 03 1996 15:35 | 12 |
| RE: StrongARM
From what I've been reading, this is ramping up very quickly as
one of the top contenders in the NC race. (NC = Network Computer)
Do I think we should product a NC of our own? Probably not. We
could re-badge someone elses, if they take off.
Do I think we can be successful producing some of the components?
Yup.
mike
|
4770.77 | Pyramid scheme | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Tue Sep 03 1996 15:38 | 21 |
|
As discussed here and about, we need ALL of the applications for a
usage segment. I remember losing a workstation bid a few years back
because we lacked a radar antenna simulation application. The supplier
was a guy who worked out of his house in the hills of Silicon Valley.
SUN lent him equipment when he started, so his application worked only
on SUN.
Despite low volumes, Data Warehousing, Mining, etc. could be a killer
application if it causes the customer to force other application
suppliers to port. Data Warehousing, etc., buyers are big IT buyers.
Thay have clout, if they want to use it. Will they pull enough other
applications to Alpha to build momentum?
I wonder if Digital has built a market application map for this use
segment and how much we have to fill in yet.
It is like starting at the point to build the great pyramid.
|
4770.78 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Sep 03 1996 15:42 | 9 |
| StrongARM will also figure in the next-generation Newton coming
from Apple around Christmas time.
You might argue that this next-generation Newton could be one
example of the Network Computer. It's also a lot more, and
powered by StrongARM, it should finally be able to shake
many of the woes and jokes that the earlier Newtons provoked.
Atlant
|
4770.79 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge | Tue Sep 03 1996 15:49 | 11 |
| I read with interest recently (I think it was Business Week)
about a useful PDA (the Newton is less than useful) concept...
The concept was that it was a limited purpose, extension to
a PC. You connected it simply to your PC, and the PC would
then download things like -- your updated phone directory, and
calendar. And upload things to your PC that had been input
since the last docking. Pretty cool stuff.
Gone were the things that even remotely made it try to mimic
a pocket PC. And it even fits in a pocket.
|
4770.80 | Newton and NC | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Tue Sep 03 1996 16:36 | 15 |
| StongARM will power Newton??? That is great!
Second generation products can take off if the producer listens carefully.
(LA36 vs LA30, VT100 vs VT52, Apple Mac vs Lisa, MicroVax 2 vs MV1,
Windows 3.1 vs Windows 1&2). Newton hit the market and messed up once.
Second try might work. Could give Hudson some volume.
I have less hope for the NC terminal. If it boots off of the net,
start up will be very slow until the network infrastructure improves.
If it boots internally it will need non volatile memory or disk to
store the start up program. Both are getting cheaper, but still
expensive for a $499 device. I think we will see several attempts
at an NC before someone gets it right. A cellular phone may be the
best model, were the connection service subsidizes the hardware.
It will take a while be for the NC hits consumer driven volume.
|
4770.81 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Tue Sep 03 1996 18:07 | 8 |
| RE: Note 4770.80 by SUBSYS::JAMES
> StongARM will power Newton??? That is great!
Apple has always been the first customer for StrongARM. Ed Caldwell
was showing off a StrongARM based Newtons in Hudson a couple of weeks
ago.
|
4770.82 | Ironic | STOWOA::16.125.64.233::willis | Digital Services - http://www-rpoc.ogo.dec.com | Wed Sep 04 1996 10:28 | 7 |
| It strikes me as ironic that a Digital powered Newton could
possibly help ressurect Apple (and Digital) years after, from what I have
read/heard, we didn't strike a deal with apple to use Alphas when they were
looking for a processor for their new computer architecture.
C'Ya,
Wayne
|
4770.83 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Wed Sep 04 1996 13:17 | 11 |
|
> Apple has always been the first customer for StrongARM. Ed Caldwell
> was showing off a StrongARM based Newtons in Hudson a couple of weeks
> ago.
Does he still have them? What is the handwriting recognition like now?
Can it keep up with normal writing?
Mark
|
4770.84 | For MessagePad 120's and 130's... | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Sep 04 1996 13:21 | 11 |
| Mark:
Even without Strongarm, the newer Newtons have much-improved
recognition. (More RAM was a big help.) Also, now they can also
do "deferred recognition", storing your writing as "Digital Ink"
until you do recognition later. Thus, they can keep up with you,
recognition or not.
StrongARM, though, should make things even better.
Atlant
|
4770.85 | | LUDWIG::BOUCHARD | | Wed Sep 04 1996 13:55 | 8 |
|
The best little ooooh ahhh we got from the demo of the new
Newtons was the voice/text text/voice recognition. The
Newton read a memo from some Apple big wig directed to Ed
thanking him for Hudson manufacturing the StrongArm.
db3
|
4770.86 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Thu Sep 05 1996 05:59 | 15 |
| re: .84
I have a Message Pad 110, which has "magnetic ink" and deferred recognition.
With those, if you very carefully craft a single word, it can get it after
a few seconds. As soon as you start writing at "normal" speeds it
falls apart pretty rapidly. Even with deferred recognition, your writing
is so different at speed that it can't recognize it. Pen and paper are
much quicker.
Text to voice may make a good demo but it's commonplace on some sound
cards. Even a 386 can do well at that. Now voice-to-text is different
matter!
Mark
|
4770.87 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Sep 05 1996 09:38 | 8 |
| Mark:
> I have a Message Pad 110, which has "magnetic ink" and deferred recognition.
Note the models I claimed in my title. Your 110 doesn't have the
advantage of the newly-increased RAM, does it?
Atlant
|
4770.88 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Thu Sep 05 1996 14:33 | 4 |
|
I missed that, good point. Time for a demo.
M
|