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Intel IT

Analyst Doubts Intel's Dual-Core Demo 193

bakeacake writes "At Xbitlabs they have a article on the possibility that Intel's Dual core Preview at the IDF was not real. Would Intel sink this low? "An analyst expressed doubts about demonstration of a 'real' dual-core microprocessor during an Intel's recent demonstration at Intel Developer Forum Fall 2004 in San Francisco, California. Insight's Nathan Brookwood believes that Intel was most likely to showcase a dual-processor system instead of a dual-core processor-based system during the show.""
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Analyst Doubts Intel's Dual-Core Demo

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  • Vaporware (Score:5, Interesting)

    by EggMan2000 ( 308859 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:34PM (#10268280) Homepage Journal
    What Intel and Vaporware? Never! They have to compete with the likes of IBM:

    In other news: IBM is preparing a dual-core version of its 90nm PowerPC 970FX processor - aka the G5. Codenamed Antares, the chip will be delivered - likely in sample form - to Apple later this summer.

    News article here [theregister.co.uk]
    • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) *
      the chip will be delivered - likely in sample form - to Apple later this summer.

      Technically it's still Summer for a few more days. ;-)

      • by morcego ( 260031 )
        I see now reference on the article which part the world they are using as reference. It might as well my on the southern, where summer begins at December 22th (or close to that).

        It is all a matter of reference :)
    • by Anonymous Coward
      IBM has been building dual-core processors for some time now. They just haven't been going into boxes that can be picked up by one person without a forklift.
    • Re:Vaporware (Score:5, Insightful)

      by binaryDigit ( 557647 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:04PM (#10268683)
      What Intel and Vaporware? Never! They have to compete with the likes of IBM: In other news: IBM is preparing a dual-core version of its 90nm PowerPC 970FX processor - aka the G5

      Hardly an apples/apples comparison (no pun intended). IBM has been shipping dual core Power4 processors now for a couple of years. Wouldn't be that much of a stretch to believe that they would have a dual core G5 out in that timeframe. After all, if you read the article and applied the three scenarios, you'd see that the dual core G5 actually meets there first one (it really was a dual core).
    • In other news: IBM is preparing a dual-core version of its 90nm PowerPC 970FX processor - aka the G5. Codenamed Antares, the chip will be delivered - likely in sample form - to Apple later this summer.

      Would either company necessarily want it to be public knowledge when they actually deliver those samples?
      Apple may have been testing samples for the last month, for all we know.
      They could have both agreed that once again, surprise would work really well in their favor in the market for this next leap in te

  • by garcia ( 6573 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:35PM (#10268305)
    "The least likely scenario is that the demo used the first silicon samples of the dual-core product planned for release next year. Intel did demo the first silicon for its dual-core Itanium, and AMD had just demonstrated the first silicon for its Opteron processor the week prior to IDF. We believe that if Intel actually had achieved this milestone, it would have trumpeted the news far more loudly and widely; their awesome PR machine would have made sure everyone on the planet was aware of this accomplishment. So we discount this theory completely," Nathan Brookwood writes.

    Intel's R&D department routinely has processors way more advanced than its current offerings running at near production stability so I am confused as to why Mr. Brookwood believes something different. Intel rarely trumpets any news "loudly". They are much more likely to wait until they are confident that they can release the product on time (unlike MSFT which likes to do exactly the opposite).

    Mr. Brookwood should be moderated -1 Troll. He's likely being paid off by another chip manufacturer to "trumpet this news loudly" and keep the public's attention away from other people's lack of success in the same arena.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      unlike MSFT which likes to do exactly the opposite

      Bill Gates dies in a car accident. He finds himself in purgatory, being sized up by St. Peter. "Well, Bill, I`m really confused on this call; I`m not sure whether to send you to Heaven or Hell. After all, you enormously helped society by putting a computer in almost every home, yet you also created that ghastly Windows `95. I`m going to do something I`ve never done before in your case; I`m going to let you decide where you want to go." Bill replied, "wel
    • Harsh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:49PM (#10268494) Homepage Journal
      Mr. Brookwood should be moderated -1 Troll. He's likely being paid off by another chip manufacturer to "trumpet this news loudly" and keep the public's attention away from other people's lack of success in the same arena.

      That's a bit harsh. Yes, Intel is going to have stuff in R&D that would make your eyes pop and have you salivating and the thought of being posessed of such technology (a friend, back in 1980, was working on CPUs for the DoD clocked at 100 MHz, while we dinked around with sub 10 MHz stuff) but you would probably find it in such a state that it couldn't be housed in a standard cabinet or the motherboard is fairly jury-rigged to support it, and that says nothing about actually having a compiled O/S to run on the thing and take full advantage of it.

      • Re:Harsh (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        the motherboard is fairly jury-rigged to support it, and that says nothing about actually having a compiled O/S to run on the thing and take full advantage of it.

        I'd say you're spot on. . . Seing that the northbridge, CPU, ans PCIe are on one board and the southbridge, PCI and other I/O controllers are on a seperate board. Of course as anyone in the CPU industry knows, that is a relatively common debug platform setup.
        posting AC for hopefully obvious reasons.

        oh and the OS is likely an internal OS der
        • oh and the OS is likely an internal OS derivitive of Linux

          Now tell me... why would a dual core CPU need any more OS support than a dual processor motherboard. There is no more CPU state that has to be saved off. About the only thing I could see is a tweak to the scheduler to expand CPU affinity to both cores in the package if there were a shared cache (which my understanding of the Intel offering is there isn't)

  • by njfuzzy ( 734116 ) <ian&ian-x,com> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:35PM (#10268308) Homepage
    This article is pure speculation. Yeah, well I doubt the reporter was at the show... I mean, he *could* just be saying he was there.
    • I tried to moderate this, when
      I realized we realy need a new
      moderation category 'paranoid'.

      Seriously, i do believe that the
      'maybe intel didnt demo a real
      dualcore cpu but said they did'

      article is near 100% speculation.
      Any facts here? Didnt saw them.
  • by Jailbrekr ( 73837 ) <jailbrekr@digitaladdiction.net> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:36PM (#10268314) Homepage
    When releasing "cutting edge" technology, sometimes they have to cut corners. What may have been a dual core processor could possibly be nothing more than an overglorified dual processor system in a single chip. Any advantages of a dual core chip (shared cache, faster interprocessor communications) would have been negated by the fact that they had to rely on older, proven technology to hobble together that dual core chip.

    • I think everyone is speculating without knowing a darn thing. I would like to see an Intel response. If they have the chip, I think they'll step out and show everyone. Or, it could be another Dan Rather event where they say, well it exists we just won't give you any evidence of it.
    • Dude you need to read intels specs for dual core.

      They don't intend to have any of that stuff anyway.

      It's like the redundant cache their chips have always sported... they just don't get it.
  • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:36PM (#10268319) Homepage Journal
    So what they're really saying is it's a rigged demo. Probably with rigged benchmarks and all the other trappings.

    At last week's Developer Forum, Intel demonstrated how its Digital Office vision might enable three workers in different locations to collaborate to solve a complicated problem. One of the workers ("Jason") had to juggle several compute-intensive tasks on his system, but the work flowed easily without the sorts of fits and starts that would plague many contemporary systems.

    Ah, a flawless network connection! Proof!

    pay attention to the man behind the curtain.

  • Right.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:37PM (#10268324)
    Some random idiot questions something, and it's news? By the way, "analyst" _is_ synonymous with "random idiot".

    The guy has no data whatsoever to back his crackpot opinion and just likes to hear himself talk and sound knowledgeable.

    How ridiculous. I'm hoping Intel's lawyers send this guy a very pointed letter.
  • What exactly is a dual-core microprocessor? The article didn't really elaborate.
    • by zoobaby ( 583075 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:41PM (#10268382)
      It is two processors on a single die. It would be like having a dual processor system, but only needing a single socket to support it. Now add in Hyperthreading and it would appear to be a 4-way system. Many people are really excited about this, and it is definately a cool engineering feat.
    • by Malor ( 3658 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:53PM (#10268542) Journal
      Just a single CPU die with two CPUs on it. If the board can support it, it's like plugging two CPUs into one socket.

      This is quite easy for AMD because of how bus logic works. The Athlon 64 series use an integrated memory controller, and normally, a second CPU uses the same connection to the system RAM that the first one does. (ie, one Hypertransport connection is shared, by design, between two CPUs.) So a dual-core CPU is trivially easy for them to implement, relatively speaking: they have space and heat issues, but all the architectural design work is done already.

      Intel, on the other hand, hasn't designed this way. Instead, for years now, they have been totally focused around more and more clock speed. This has left AMD scrambling, becaus their chip designs get more work done per clock tick, so a 1600mhz AthlonXP will keep up quite nicely with a much higher-clocked P4. But consumers, thanks to Intel mostly, don't understand that, and so AMD came up with their numbering system instead. (they were lucky this worked, because at least one prior attempts at this, by Cyrix, failed utterly.)

      Well, the worm is turning. Intel's aproach, that of "more megahertz, dammit!" is very rapidly running out of steam. They have been selling people for years on megahertz, and suddenly they're in the position where they can't increase megahertz easily anymore. This is a BIG deal for them; all those billions spent 'educating' consumers on something that wasn't true is coming back to bite them.

      A dual-core Prescott will not be an easy thing, and will require substantial motherboard and chipset changes. And they have a fundamental bandwidth problem; P4s need very high memory bandwidth to really get good. The P4 didn't truly hit its stride until it went to a quad-pumped 200mhz bus... 800mhz effective RAM speed. At that point, the P4 architecture finally sits up and really starts singing. But doing a dual-core chip means that both CPUs have to share bandwidth, so to maintain performance, they'll have to go to a 1600mhz bus. That's not likely in the near future.

      AMD is doing the exact same thing, but the A64 design is much less clockspeed- and bandwidth-intensive. It gets more work done per clock tick, doesn't hit the RAM as hard, and runs cooler. So it's a natural for dual-core. Forcing the P4 into that same mold, on the other hand, is a move of desperation by Intel. It won't work very well, but their crank-the-megahertz strategy suddenly isn't working AT ALL.

      From what I can see, Intel is in trouble.
      • by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:19PM (#10268858)
        A dual-core Prescott will not be an easy thing...they have a fundamental bandwidth problem...Forcing the P4 into that same mold, on the other hand, is a move of desperation by Intel

        Remember, Intel has a second P4 compatable CPU. The Pentium-M is much closer to AMD in instructions per clock (e.g. a Pentium-M at 1.5GHz performs close to a P4 at 2.5GHz). And it uses less power to accompolish this feat. Perhaps Intel will use their more efficient processor for dual core applications.

        • Ok, but I think one of the grandparent's points still stands: people educated by Intell about the Mhx/Ghz will have hard time understanding why they have to go to slower rates (even if it will mean that dual core will be faster due to better instruction handling and hyperthreading.)\

          • people educated by Intell about the Mhx/Ghz

            Which is exactly why Intel is now going to model numbers to distinguish processors, instead of just referring to them by their clock rates, as they used to do. They are as strongly deemphasizing clock rates now as they once promoted them. They too know that the clock rate wars are over.

        • by Malor ( 3658 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @03:08PM (#10269480) Journal
          The Pentium-M is an incredibly good design, probably the single best piece of technology out of Intel since the original Pentium. And their numbering schemes would lend some plausibility to that; Pentium-Ms are 700-series, and P4s are 400-series. Bigger is obviously better. :-)

          It's weird that you can't find Pentium-M motherboards. I looked a whole bunch, not too long ago... I wanted to set up a nearly silent PC in the front room, and figured a Pentium-M was the perfect choice. I only found one, and it was like $450, and impossible to order in singles. It's weird that so few manufacturers make motherboards for this chip... it's exceptionally powerful, and would be just about the best choice for a silent PC I can imagine. The Via Edens are good, but the Pentium-M is far more powerful and only dissipates a little bit more heat.

          Definitely a good choice for a multicore CPU, but the marketroids have been in charge of Intel for a long time, and I'm not sure how the Pentium-M, as good as it is, fits into their 'message'.
      • But consumers, thanks to Intel mostly, don't understand that, and so AMD came up with their numbering system instead. (they were lucky this worked, because at least one prior attempts at this, by Cyrix, failed utterly.)

        If it was anything like my Cyrix-base laptop, the "numbers" were probably more of disclaimer than a sales point.

      • by flaming-opus ( 8186 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:55PM (#10269311)
        We can all shout and scream about how the netburst architecture doesn't work, but that doesn't make it true. 3.6 ghz p4's are FAST. Yes they run hot. Yes they don't get the same ops/mhz that short pipelines do, but they're doing okay. Intel still sells a butt-load of chips, and thats what they're in the business for.

        Incidently, all that "sharing bandwidth" stuff is what the 2 cores on a dual-core opteron will do. It's also what ALL the 2-cpu xeons in the world are doing. Again, not the greatest plan ever, but it works well enough today. The shared bus on a dual-core prescott is no different from the shared bus on a dual-chip xeon today.

        Intel is in trouble in that they might go from 93% market share to 85%. Look at the market today. Ultrasparc 4's are slower than Itanium, yet ia64 still isn't making real money. The G5 is a really fast processor, but apple has about 2% of the desktop market. Being the fastest processor THIS MONTH doesn't mean the world is going to come knocking. Being close and having a good marketing campaign is more important.

      • I think a lot of intels current problems come from problems implementing 90nm but once they get that handled they will be back to the gighz game this dual core thing is just a temporary side track.
      • (they were lucky this worked, because at least one prior attempts at this, by Cyrix, failed utterly.)

        Probably because:

        a) there were massive compatibility and reliability problems with Cyrix-based systems; and

        b) Cyrix's numbers were most accurately described as 'deceptive', whereas AMD's are merely 'optimistic'.

      • I'm having a bit of a problem with the perceived difficulty of building a dual core processor. I mean, around 10 years ago motorola was doing it, and so-called accelerator boards for the amiga computers could be had for about $700 or so.

        The processor? A Motorola MC68060, which was a 50MHZ, all cmos version of the MC68040 with dual execution units, so theoreticly it should have been as fast as a 100MHZ MC68040. It fell somewhat short of true 4x speeds though since it had a few instructions missing and th
    • Well, it's a computer which has the insides of two common red fruits in it. Only the Macintosh can use them, for obvious reasons.
  • Tin-foil hat? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Krach42 ( 227798 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:39PM (#10268363) Homepage Journal
    What kind of weird conspiracy are these people trying to set up?

    WHY would Intel lie about providing a dual-core processor?

    WHY would Intel think it better to showcase a dual processor system and call it a dual-core?

    WHY does this person think that Intel would be incapable of producing the demo?

    Hm... maybe I should RTFA, and have a good laugh.
    • by phalse phace ( 454635 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:57PM (#10268595)
      Hm... maybe I should RTFA, and have a good laugh.

      Must I remind you of the first rule of /.? You *never* RTFA.

    • Hmmmm...

      a.) Intel Investors
      b.) Previous open demo by AMD with the same technology.
    • WHY? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by dpilot ( 134227 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:23PM (#10268908) Homepage Journal
      Because Intel had to revamp roadmap, and has no product.

      Their Pentium4 with NetBurst Architecture has smashed into a brick wall.

      Their IA-64, meant to destroy the Clones, never caught on very well, and any plans to penetrate the lower-end (but not low-end) have been cut off at the knees by X86-64.

      The Pentium-M is a success, but was apparently meant to be a niche product. Suddenly it's being called on to become mainstream, and they're not ready for that.

      They've got to show something to make them worthy of the future. They've reacted and revamped their roadmap, but their hand TODAY is rather weak. They've got to show that they're executing their new roadmap, and will deliver what customers want/need.

      I suspect that to uncover the truth, you have to find out *exactly* what Intel said at the demo, and offered for publication. Then you have to analyze that for what they *didn't* say. I suspect that Intel didn't lie, but I also suspect that they were careful to omit some details. Neither of those can be gleaned from the article.
      • Good point, I just don't see the point of a major company resorting to decete, and questionable data to get attention...

        Of course, CBS seems to have done this themselves, or at least they're being very sharply criticized over what they've produced to the public...

        *NOT* to crack open that big can of worms, but only to point out, that indeed, some companies of very high regard may distort or at least come under some sort of credible scrutiny of the information the present. Neglecting all possiblities of th
  • by cloudscout ( 104011 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:41PM (#10268381) Homepage
    Dan Rather has uncovered 8th-generation photocopies of some internal Intel memos confirming that the actual dual-core processor was AWOL during the Devloper Forum.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:43PM (#10268417)
    Analyst Doubts Intel's Dual-Core Demonstration
    Insight 64 Asks Whether Intel Has Desktop Dual-Core x86 Chip

    by Anton Shilov
    09/15/2004 | 01:55 PM

    An analyst expressed doubts about demonstration of a "real" dual-core microprocessor during an Intel's recent demonstration at Intel Developer Forum Fall 2004 in San Francisco, California. Insight 64's Nathan Brookwood believes that Intel was most likely to showcase a dual-processor system instead of a dual-core processor-based system during the show.

    At last week's Developer Forum, Intel demonstrated how its Digital Office vision might enable three workers in different locations to collaborate to solve a complicated problem. One of the workers ("Jason") had to juggle several compute-intensive tasks on his system, but the work flowed easily without the sorts of fits and starts that would plague many contemporary systems. At the conclusion of the demo, Bill Siu, the General Manager of Intel's Desktop Platforms Group, casually noted that "Jason was using a dual-core system on a 915 [i.e., Grantsdale] platform." When asked about it later during a Q&A session, Siu smiled coyly, and added only that the system used "an engineering prototype" of a dual core processor with "real silicon." This begs the question of what was really inside the box.

    Nathan Brookwood, the principal analyst for Insight 64 believes there are three options of what Intel might demonstrate.

    "The least likely scenario is that the demo used the first silicon samples of the dual-core product planned for release next year. Intel did demo the first silicon for its dual-core Itanium, and AMD had just demonstrated the first silicon for its Opteron processor the week prior to IDF. We believe that if Intel actually had achieved this milestone, it would have trumpeted the news far more loudly and widely; their awesome PR machine would have made sure everyone on the planet was aware of this accomplishment. So we discount this theory completely," Nathan Brookwood writes.

    "It is a bit more likely that Intel crammed two of its current Pentium chips into a single package that could be plugged into the socket of a 915 motherboard. (This is known as a multi-chip package (MCP), and has been used for years in certain applications.) The standard P4 package measures about 30mm on a side, and could conceivably hold many discrete processors that only measure about 11mm on a side. Intel wouldn't do this just for an IDF demo, but the resulting MCP might be useful for evaluating dual-core platforms, especially if the initial dual-core design follows the scheme we outlined above. The system would certainly be consistent with Siu's claims of "dual core," "915," and "real silicon," Mr. Brookwood claims.

    "It is even more likely that Intel merely designed a dual-processor motherboard around its 915 chipset. The 915 is normally used only in uniprocessor designs, but there is no reason why engineers inside Intel could not circumvent the restrictions that prevent Intel's customers from using the 915 in DP configurations. Designing a unique motherboard is clearly less expensive and takes less time than creating a multi-chip package, and the resulting system would come close to replicating the performance of the eventual dual-core product. Like the MCP scenario, this system would fit with Siu's claims of "dual core," "915," and "real silicon," Insight's 64 principal analyst concludes, leaving the readers to decide what exactly did Intel showcase.

    The analyst notes that typical Intel-based SMP systems, such as those fuelled by Intel Xeon processors, have processor system bus bottleneck, as all the chips have to share one PSB, be it a 400MHz QPB for 4-way systems or 800MHz PSB for 2-way systems. It is believed that dual-core processors will also have to share the same bus, which may limit their performance, even though by the time dual-core desktop chips are available, Intel will also present 1066MHz infrastructure for such microprocessors.

    Intel and AMD both showcased
  • From the article (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Max Threshold ( 540114 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:44PM (#10268420)
    "Designing a unique motherboard is clearly less expensive and takes less time than creating a multi-chip package, and the resulting system would come close to replicating the performance of the eventual dual-core product."

    So... why don't they just do that?

    • A lot of software requires a license for each processor. Your Oracle DB just doubled in price...
    • Someone mentioned licensing. There are also a few architectural headaches that come with a dual core design. The real bottleneck to performance hasn't been the MIPS of the processors, it's been the speed of the I/O bus.

      Adding a second core is like throwing in a second engine onto a car while leaving all of the other components the same. Sure it's twice as powerful. But all the extra power is good for is spinning the tires. Towing capacity is a function of what your suspension, brakes, and drive train will

    • Because if they make a dual-core processor, they could then go ahead and modify the motherboard to support two dual-core processors.
  • Yes, They Would (Score:5, Interesting)

    by 00Monkey ( 264977 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:44PM (#10268429) Homepage
    I was at a Microsoft OEM System Builder conference for the release of Windows XP and Intel just happened to be showing off the Pentium 4. They did a video encoding benchmark, the pentium 4 2ghz vs the Pentium III 1ghz. They had *1* stopwatch, started the Pentium 4 and then 15 seconds later started the Pentium III. Then when the Pentium 4 only made out twice as fast as the Pentium III, they started saying how great it was that it was 2x the performance. They never accounted for the 15 second head start that the Pentium 4 had... meaning it wasn't even twice as fast.

    Regardless of whether the P4 is good or not, that was a pretty crappy thing to do and when about 20% of the crowd commented on it, the Intel guys merely say "that didn't happen".
  • And it was actually just a VCR or BetaMAX or whatever hooked up to the screen? yeah, that was pretty funny, but I don't think that's what we are seeing here. Intel isn't under the same kind of pressure NeXT was, and would have no real reason to atempt such a stunt.
  • Why not show it? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hirschma ( 187820 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:45PM (#10268444)
    AMD did a dual core demo the week before. They opened the boxes, passed around sample chips, showed enlargements of the cores, etc.

    Intel did their demo with a closed box, presumably in response to AMD. Only when asked if it was really dual core did they say it contained "real silicon".

    I'd say that there was some vapor in that closed box, too.
    • That would be the solution. Have the media invited to an event where they pull out the machine in question. They could show off the board, chip, etc.
    • AMD did a dual core demo the week before. They opened the boxes, passed around sample chips, showed enlargements of the cores, etc.

      Intel did their demo with a closed box, presumably in response to AMD. Only when asked if it was really dual core did they say it contained "real silicon".

      Intel showed enlargements of their dual core Itanium [extremetech.com] chip along with their demo.

    • Everyone who works with computers knows that the secret in getting them to work is not to let the magic smoke get out! ;)
  • "Capricornian One" sounded pretty fishy to me too, but they did boil several kettles of tea during the demo, so who knows?
  • by El ( 94934 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:48PM (#10268469)
    Intel has a "don't cheat" mentality for precisely this reason - getting caught misrepresenting a demo would seriously damage their credibility. Intel also has a lot of stuff available in-house that is several years away from production. So I don't think an engineer would lie about this, even though Intel marketing does lie every time they claim the latest Pentium will make the Internet much faster...
    • by twfry ( 266215 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:04PM (#10268690)
      Thats why they called it an "engineering prototype". That can be anything, even two separate processors slapped together in the same package. You can be sure that if they had real silicon they would be showing pictures and doing a _LOT_ more PR.
  • Running scared (Score:5, Interesting)

    by IGnatius T Foobar ( 4328 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:48PM (#10268473) Homepage Journal
    Intel has been caught off guard. They definitely have a lot of products in the R&D pipeline, but they spent so many years focusing on the Itanium future that they're really starting to hurt from the fact that nobody wants Itaniums.

    Fortunately, even Intel's second-string is big and fast enough to keep pace with the rest of the industry, but things like this show that they really are having to make a huge effort to do so. I'm sure the dual-core demo was genuine, but as with so many demos of this type, it must have been very carefully scripted to avoid an embarassing crash.
    • I'd like an Itanium. I'm just not willing to pay a bazillion bucks for one. Intel's prices are way too high for a mass-market chip.
    • ... they spent so many years focusing on the Itanium future that they're really starting to hurt from the fact that nobody wants Itaniums.

      Itanium was a joint effort with HP, and from my understanding a majority of its developement, promotion, and general market push is coming from HP. I doubt that Intel is being hampered *THAT* bad, by its failure.

      Intel's second-string is big and fast enough to keep pace with the rest of the industry, but things like this show that they really are having to make a huge
    • The real truth, if you look at Pentium Ms, is that they have a processor that is quite up there with AMD in every respect. For now, they are selling Prescotts and their 3.x GHz number, once they get "car model"-numbering worked in, they can replace it with a desktop version of the Pentium M, running at A64-class clock speeds.

      AMD is not "taking over the world" any time soon. They have been improving because Intel has been too busy competing against their last round of processors by increasing GHz numbers. T
  • does it matter? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by 21chrisp ( 757902 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:48PM (#10268474)
    After reading the article I fail to see what difference it makes. So Intel used something "similar" to a dual core to demonstrate how a dual core CPU would perform. What's the big deal? It doesn't seem like it's worth the time to write an article over something like this. I'm sure the "real" dual core processors will show up soon enough. It's not like they're selling whatever is in that computer.
    • Re:does it matter? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by l3v1 ( 787564 )
      So Intel used something "similar" to a dual core [...] I'm sure the "real" dual core processors will show up soon

      Well in case you mean like two zebras are "similar" to one two-headed zebra which is the "real" thing, than you are absolutely right :P

      In case you would understand the difference between dual processor systems and a dual-core cpu architecture, you wouldn't say things like you did (no matter what Intel has or has not shown).

      • Re:does it matter? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

        Depending on how intel is doing the dual-core part there might or might not be a significant difference in performance between the two. Any difference would make the real thing faster so at least intel is not misrepresenting the processor's performance.

        If the new architecture is similar to the old one, with a separate piece of logic handling the SMP, then I suspect this will not substantially change performance. In the classic intel SMP model, only one processor can access main memory at a time.

        Howev

    • After reading the article I fail to see what difference it makes. So Intel used something "similar" to a dual core to demonstrate how a dual core CPU would perform. What's the big deal?

      Say I wanted to invest in a company that is going to put out dual core chips. Intel says they've got chips so I invest. Later turns out that they don't actually have chips ready and ran into issues that kept them from getting them out. Due to their misrepresentation of what they've accomplished, I invested in them instead o

  • hehe, wow (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ak3ldama ( 554026 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:50PM (#10268507) Journal
    i just read on thg their review of the idf held recently, and those intel fan boys didn't even say anything about why the chip wasn't physically displayed ... there is even a funny picture of a staffer hauling the case out of the presentation right away ( here [tomshardware.com] )
  • by Kenja ( 541830 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:52PM (#10268528)
    I recall a demo of the Nintendo 64 that had an SGI reality engine system under the table.
  • Oh come on. I saw it. There were two chips, lashed together by duct tape, together in one socket.

    More seriously though, none of this stuff is worth getting all that excited about, until you can actually buy it yourself -- and it works!

  • by vincecate ( 741268 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:09PM (#10268743) Journal
    Intel showed images of a dual-core Itanium called Montecito [aceshardware.com] and dual-core mobile called Yohan [tomshardware.de].

    However, there was a desktop "engineering prototype" that was kind of quiet. No picture was shown. It sounds like they made a multichip module from 2 die to test things. If they had a dual-core Xeon, they would have said so clearly and not just mentioned after a demo that the machine was using an engineering prototype dual-core.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:11PM (#10268766)
    is indistinguishable from a rigged demo. Apologies to Asimov.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    It could have been a dual core or not. It doesn't matter, especially to the Marketing folks. Heck, I've made demos that my Marketing department has tried to pass off as real products- they like to call them "capabilities." Never mind that the manufacturing capability hadn't been worked out yet. I hate it when they say, "hmmm... maybe Mark can make 10k of them a month." :)

    At least in Intel's case, there's the real possibility of actually having the part available when they say it will.

    That said, I have an
  • by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:23PM (#10268911)
    Of course the demo was fake. If you look closely at the chip surface you'll see that where it said:

    Pentium 4 Dual Core Prescott

    That was actually typed using a 1974 IBM Correcting Selectric II typewriter on loan from CBS.

  • In functionality, that is - isn't intel using their same old lousy technology to do multiple cores in a system? Would there really be substantially different performance from a system with totally separate packages on a board as compared to two dies in the same package, or two cores on one die? I know on-chip interconnects are faster than off-chip, of course, but my understanding was that the limiting factor was the cross-connect architecture, not the traces.
    • If the two cores have a shared cache (as IBM's multi-core POWER chips do), any given word must only be in cache once and can be accessed by both cores. If the chips are separate dies on the same chip (with their own caches), or separate chips on the motherboard, you can wind up with a lot of redundant data in the caches.

      I don't remember if Intel's supposed multi-core chip has a unified cache architecture or not.

      I definitely wouldn't put the faked demo past them, however -- tech companies do this all the
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:52PM (#10269267)
    Google the authors name, the very first result is a link to AMD's website becasue Nathan Brookwood gave a keynote speech for AMD.

    http://www.amd.com/us-en/Weblets/0,,7832_8366_78 23 _8721%5E7827,00.html
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:54PM (#10269294)
    I used to work at what is now a major telecomm company ( hint: now owned by a French telecomm giant ).

    We were at a show once pitching a new router that simply Did Not Work. To make matters worse, the case for our engineering sample was damaged just before the show.

    Truth: We got a block of wood. Painted in black. Attached some LED's with wires on it that blinked randomly. Put it inside a rack with a smoked glass door.

    "Demoed" the crap out of it for 16 hours over three days. I had new respect for the ability of our sales people to talk bullshit for so long without opening that freaking rack door.
  • Like many others here, I'm a little skeptical of this "analyst's" line of reasoning and ultimate conclusions.

    I think it's important to remember that this was a freakin' dog & pony show. Everyone knows multi-core is the future. Everyone knows that having a multi-core CPU shipping in some critical timeframe is important.

    Does Intel actually have working prototypes? Who cares.

    Will Intel ever have working multi-core 64-bit CPUs. They will, or they will no longer be significant.

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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