Itanium Retreats To Multis, Opteron Presses Attack 61
However, Opterons are designed for multiprocessing. Each has its own memory and built in hypertransport links to make NUMA multiprocessors. So existing Opterons don't need large expensive caches like Xeon MP, nor any glue chips for up to 8-way multiprocessors. This has started the commoditization of multiprocessors. You can now buy a 4-way Opteron for $6000 or an 8-way for $10,000.
There is an interesting interview with Tyan CEO and his assistant that give some info about future Opteron plans. People are working on 8-way motherboards that will become 16-way when duel-core Opterons come out. They also say that the next Opteron core, the K9, will be able to 'go over 60 processors without adding any external crossbar chips.' Another fun plan mentioned is connecting the hypertransport links using fibers for really large systems."
x64 vs x86? (Score:3, Insightful)
A better name would just be x86-64 or some generic marketing term. Any suggestions?
Re:x64 vs x86? (Score:3)
Re:x64 vs x86? (Score:2)
My preference is "86-64" -- get rid of the "x" business all together.
Re:x64 vs x86? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:x64 vs x86? (Score:2)
Re:Sexium (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sexium (Score:2)
Xeon and Itanium will share the same bus (Score:2)
that means that all the Xeon boards will accept Itanium and means large Itanium systems could accept Xeon's (x86_64) and so those huge clusters could also be x86_64 clusters or IA64 clusters...
intel hedge bets
plus I thought that hypertransport bandwidth was good but not great (why the memory controler was on chip) so that means accessing memory on another processor would be expensive...
hmmm if all the processors are working on the same d
Re:Xeon and Itanium will share the same bus (Score:3, Informative)
Intel and HP are already doing something like that with their dual-core PA-RISC workstation, as it uses the same socket and chipset as the Itanium... the only difference is that the firmware used was designed for the PA-RISC. That rig
x86 code size advantage over Itanium (Score:4, Informative)
Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:5, Interesting)
Intel is aiming their Xeon with EM64T at the Opteron while pinning the Itanium against Sun's UltraSPARC, IBM's POWER, etc. Unfortunately, the Itanium is also used as a replacement for the PA-RISC and the Alpha
I favor the Opteron over the Itanium because of backwards compatibility without performance problems, lower cost, lower power consumption and better I/O and memory throughput.
I have bashed the Itanium in the past... but I still think it is a bit too early to sent it crashing towards an iceberg and sinking it soon. It does have it's good qualities, but also a fair amount of downsides.
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:2)
This (SGI Altixes) is not a feature of Itanium, but rather of the proprietary S-HUB chips and NUMAlink. Opteron can scale easily as well, provided that you accompany it with a right chipset (as opposed to 1-4 CPU Opteron boxes which can live without an external northbridge).
Just take alook at Cray XD-1 -
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:1)
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:1)
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:1)
New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
A new chipset for 32-way opterons [eweek.com] should be out by the end of the year. So yes, at the moment Itanium has retreated to multiprocessors where the only comperable Opteron system is the Cray XD1 [cray.com]. But it won't be safe for long.
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
The Aug 22, 2004 price for the fastest Itanium 2 available now is 1.50 GHz w/ 6M cache 400 MHz FSB (.13) $4,227 [intel.com]. Look at SPEC-FP for 4 CPUs [aceshardware.com] and see 82.2 for Itanium-2 1.5 Ghz/6MB by SGI. Also note 61.5 for Opteron 2.4 Ghz. Now AMD lists the 850 (2.4 Ghz for 8-way) at $1,514 [amd.com] though you can find it for a bit less. So Itanium here is 33% faster and nearly 3 times the price. But for peanuts compared to the price difference, you can do a bit of extra cooling on the 2.
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
Itanic shipments are not going up like this. Opterons units/month are probably more than Itanic units/year at this point and Opteron is growing far faster. So if SGI wants to make money, switching to a CPU that people really like could help.
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
I have never said that the current Opteron or the current Hypertransport-1 does more than 40-bits of live external address. Internally the registers and code are 64 bit.
If they are using 64-bit addresses in the over
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
At the moment you can buy larger Itanium systems than current Opteron systems, so Itanium has retreated to the one place it currently beats Opteron. It might take a year or even two, but Opteron will get to large systems too.
As for reliability, I don't agree that Itanium has an advantage. It is a huge chip, with many transistors, that runs hot, on a large
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
Opterons will be moving above 4-way to 8-way Opteron servers by the year end [infoworld.com].
Re:New 32-way Opterons coming soon... (Score:1)
Sure enough, AMD demoed dual-core Opterons on Aug 31st [infoworld.com].
Note that Intel has shown a wafer of dual-core Itanics [xbitlabs.com] but has not yet shown a working one. Surely they would rather have shown a working one if they could.
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:1)
1 TB is more than most people need this year, and next years Opterons could extend this.
At spec.org Opteron is up with recent Itaniums at costing 3 times as much on specInt and not far behind on FP. Again, a 4-way Opteron motherboard is probably cheaper t
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:2)
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:1)
I hope they do make very, very good use of the Alpha engineers that they got.
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:2)
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:2)
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:1)
Intel is said to have spent $5 billion on Itanic. They sold 100,000 chips in 2003. If you say $3,000/chip that is $300 mil. I think it is safe to say that Intel has lost more money on ia64 than they did on iAPX 432. And the percentage of x86 that moved to ia64 is also about 0.
Intel admitted the iAPX 432
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:1)
Another thing is they seem to have reduced development of the x86 since they thought Itanic was working. They put their best guys on the Itanic and just sort of tweeked the P4 for years. This let AMD pass them. Intel could loose many billions because of this. Intel's stock is already d
Re:Intel attempts to move away from x86 (Score:2)
Ready... FIGHT! (Score:5, Funny)
That will be soo cool when we have duel core opeterons. Can you imagine 16 opetrons dueling it out in your case?
Cool! Wicked Awesome!!!
What? A typo. Oh. Err... I knew that...
Itanium, Opteron related news... (Score:5, Funny)
In related news, Megatron Retreats to Cybertron, Optimus Prime Presses Attack.
Optimus Prime died and went to the Matrix. (Score:2)
I was watching the movie [imdb.com] with my nephew [he's four].
I don't think he quite understood what happened, but if he had, I think he would have been devastated.
US$6000/1000 for 4/8 CPUs (Score:4, Interesting)
Those offerings from Rocketcalc are dual Operon boards with orginary clustering. The only difference is, they put them in one case. A 4 CPU or 8 CPU Opteron box is far more expensive. of course a 8 CPU Itanium2 is expensive too. But comparing a bunch of (commodity) dual CPU boards with one 8 CPU box is not fair. It's the often found apple-and-oranges-comparison [improb.com] comparison.
Re:US$6000/1000 for 4/8 CPUs (Score:1)
Ouch. I did not realize that. Sun's 4-way has different cards that are connected together with hypertransport links and I thought these guys were doing the same thing in the backplane.
I have seen a 4-way Opteron motherboard (I think it was Tyan) for about $1,000. Getting this, CPUs, etc would not be all that expensive. So the $6,000 price seemed plausible.
Re:US$6000/1000 for 4/8 CPUs (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:US$6000/1000 for 4/8 CPUs (Score:2)
So Intel was right (Score:2)
What else is and has been the domain of high end x86, if not the multiprocessor server market?
Playing catchup with Motorola/IBM? (Score:2)
I can't help thinking IBM will have the edge here, since Apple's business oriented G5 range is already all dual processor, and the current G5 acritecture is (to cut a long story short) a cut down version of the quad processor Power chip set to start with.
Top 10 clues that Itanic will sink (Score:1)
10) Compatibility mode is so slow people say it is non-compatible
9) Sales can generously be described as "flat"
8) Alpha development halted for years before Itanic caught up
7) Microsoft calls AMD64 by the name x64
6) Code-size is twice x64, so needs 2x cache and 2x memory bandwidth
5) Fewer software tool vendors support it now than a year ago
4) Even before Win-x64 is released, MS supports more products on x64
3) Don't know anyone buying one, just someone who got one for free
2) Marketing keeps telling pe
Re:Top 10 clues that Itanic will sink (Score:1)
At least we can agree on something.
The magic of the Alpha team was in coming up with a great Instruction Set Architecture. Given how amazingly well the Xeon does against RISC chips it is clear that Intel has the ability to make good chips even w
Itanium and Opteron sales (Score:1)