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2.2 GHz Xeon

INicheI writes "According to Intel, the plans for a release of a 2GHz Xeon for dual processor servers have been cancelled. Instead Intel is planning to debut a 2.2GHz chip codenamed "Prestonia" that will be ready the first quarter of 2002. I would love to see Quake running on a 4.4GHz computer."

55 of 252 comments (clear)

  1. Quake? by GweeDo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why quake...i wanna see pong on that beast!

    1. Re:Quake? by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 2

      And space invaders.

      --

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      Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
  2. 4.4 ghz marketing soundin phrase by bwhalen · · Score: 2

    adding the speeds to get 4.4 ghz, cmon u sound like Cisco when they talk about 2 100bt lines in a vlan as a 400 meg connection..

    --
    Where do you want to be, What are you doing to get there.
  3. Stupid Question by David+E.+Smith · · Score: 2

    This article says the 2GHz processor for dual-processor servers has been cancelled, but then goes on to say that a 2GHz processor for dual-processor workstations is coming "in September" (though they don't say of which year). In this context, what's the difference? I'm assuming it's onboard cache or something similar, but I'd love to know.

    1. Re:Stupid Question by Dwain_Snyders · · Score: 3, Informative

      There are several advantages to a setup as described in this story ... a dual-processor Xeon can have benefits on the desktop. Of course, I'd never push a Xeon processor in this enviroment as I honestly don't think it will be the overall best solution in the near future. With dual-Athlons and Durons on the horizon, I'd take a closer look at them before considering a dual Xeon system, if only for the price aspect. However, I will attempt to explain why the Xeon architecture is superior to a standard Pentium III and why it potentially matters on the desktop.

      Intel produces a version of the Pentium II and III called the "Xeon", which contains up to 2 megabytes of L2 cache. The Xeon is used frequently in servers as it supports 8-way multi-processing, but on the desktop the Xeon does offer considerable speed advantages over the standard Pentium III when large amounts of data are involved.

      Basically, the larger the working set of an application, that is, the amount of code and data in use at any given time, the larger the L2 cache needs to be. To keep costs low, Intel and AMD have both actually DECREASED the sizes of their L2 caches in newer versions of the Pentium III and Athlon, which I believe is a mistake. (AMD is working on this in the new chips - new technology will be used to increase the size of the L2 cache while retaining the full data-shuttle flexibility).

      The top level cache, the L1 cache, is the most crucial, since it is accessed first for any memory operation. The L1 cache uses extremely high speed memory (which has to keep up with the internal speed of the processor), so it is very expensive to put on chip and tends to be relatively small. Again, from 8K in the 486 to 128K in the Athlon.

      The next step is the decoder, and this is one of the two major flaws of the P6 family. The 4-1-1 rule prevents more than one "complex" instruction from being decoded each clock cycle. Much like the U-V pairing rules for the original Pentium, Intel's documents contain tables showing how many micro-ops are required by every machine language instructions and they give guidelines on how to group instructions.

      Unlike main memory, the decoder is always in use. Every clock cycle, it decodes 1, 2, or 3 instructions of machine language code. This limits the throughput of the processor to at most 3 times the clock speed. For example, a 1 GHz Pentium III can execute at most 3 billion instructions per second, or 3000 MIPS. In reality, most programmers and most compilers write code that is less than optimal, and which is usually grouped for the complex-simple-complex-simple pairing rules of the original Pentium. As a result, the typical throughput of a P6 family processor is more like double the clock speed. For example, 2000 MIPS for a 1 GHz processor. You'll notice that the Athlon outperfoms the P3 family in this regard by a large margin.
      --

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  4. Re:Just Quake? by AntiNorm · · Score: 2

    Classic Quake + Software Mode + 4.4GHz = How many hundred fps?

    Just think of how bad the bottleneck would be at the video card. Heck, with a config like this, software mode would be better than hardware mode.

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  5. At what point... by Satai · · Score: 2

    ...does the human eye stop noticing FPS increases? At some absurd speed, we have to stop being able to distinguish, right?

    And besides, would Quake have the texture mapping to really utilize it? Or the polygon count?

    Really, what I'd like to see is a 'make buildworld' or 'make bzImage' on it. That'd be a good dipstick to jam in the ol' engine.

    1. Re:At what point... by thehag · · Score: 2, Funny

      Looks like from everyone else's comments that I must be blind.

      Oh well. At least I can't hear very well either.

      --
      Making today worse so tomorrow seems better
    2. Re:At what point... by Osty · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The difference here is that you're talking about a constant 24fps or 30fps (film vs. NTSC -- those numbers aren't exactly right, because most film projectors open the shutter 2-3 times per frame, making an apparent 48-72fps, while NTSC is interlaced, making an apparent 60fps) with motion blurring and other movement artifacts that make frames flow together. For a video game (quake, for instance), you're talking an average fps, meaning that if you're getting an average of 30fps, you're very likely going to drop down into the teens when you run into heavy action. 60fps is the "sweet spot", since you should still stay above 30fps even in heavy action. That said, there are no motion blur effects with video games (well, yet anyway -- when 3dfx tried to do that, they ended up getting an average of 3-4fps), which means that you need a higher fps just to see smooth motion. In other words, the point of having 100+fps in a video game, average case, is to make the worst case still look smooth.


      Anyway, once you can achieve an average fps of 100+, it's time to start turning that detail level up. A GeForce 3 may scream with nearly 200fps in Q3A, in 640x480x16bpp with all the details turned down, and even get a decent 80fps or so with higher detail, but the next-gen games are going to be clocking in much lower, simply due to the fact that they are so graphically rich. What that means is that video accelerators will need to continue to improve, so that we can hit the 100+fps mark on these newer, higher-detail games, so that the generation after that can go back down to 30fps with even more detail, and so on.

    3. Re:At what point... by phil_was_here · · Score: 2, Informative

      brings back memories of school at the medical center. this probably goes under what is called the temporal sensitivity of the human visual system. if you gradually increase the frequency of a blinking light you reach what is called the CFF or critical flicker frequency (or FFF) where the system can no longer detect that the light is flashing (it appears continuous). we got to do all these fun experiments. central vision (foveal cones) has a CFF of 50-70 Hz depending on the lighting conditions (state of adaptation); whereas, peripheral vision (rods) has a CFF of only 15-20 Hz. another point is that the fovea is not that sensitive to changes in light amplitude (level); whereas, in the periphery small luminance changes can be detected. this accounts for being able to detect the flicker of fluorescent lights out of the corner of your eye... then when viewed fovealy it stops flickering because here it is less sensitive. in summary we can say that peripheral vision fuses at low frequency and that it can detect flicker with small modulation. becoming a doctor was a lot of fun :p.

    4. Re:At what point... by Kynde · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have trouble distinguishing between anything above 20 FPS or so.

      I'm getting awfully tired of people mixing fps of normal video and 1st person 3D games. Having played quake and it's offspring online for 4 years now, without a shread of doubt I can say that Q3 offers you such playability that telling apart 40fps and lunartic 125fps (which btw is optimal for Quake3 engine physics, which alone would be enough reason for some ppl to go for 125) is relatively easy.

      Where you easily notice it is quick glances backwards, i.e. when in midair you just lay a glance what's right behind you and turn right back. Such rapid motions and the smoothness there are actually rather essential in quake-like games (once you get past the shooting-everything-that-moves-along-with-your-tea m-mates-phase anyway).

      In other words, the rant usually is that when looking at a screen the human eye cannot distinguish FPS's over 20 (...50 depending on who's ranting), but they usually neglect that with 1st person 3D games it's whole world ahead of you that keeps turning all around and in a very quick fashion even. We're not talking about a rotation of some teapot in a 3D animation. And what's worse, it's usually people that have zero or very very little experience in 3D gaming. The kinda "I've played through quake in hard core mode, I know what I'm talking about". Those people have very little idea how competative things have gotten in the online gaming scene.

      I can't understand why people also forget that 20 FPS would mean 50ms rate of flow. Not directly comparable, but still, anyone (experienced) who has played on the net and in a lan know that's there's a huge difference between 50ms and 10ms.

      Besides, try telling to some sprint athlete that wether his shoes weigh 10 grams less or more makes jack difference.

      --
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    5. Re:At what point... by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      In other words, lets say you're doing three frames per second, and you hit your 'turn 180 degrees to look behind yourself, then turn back' button. You'll see three images; straight ahead, straight back, straight ahead. Now lets say you're doing thirty frames per second. You'll see straight ahead, 18 degrees to the right, 36 degrees to the right, 54 degress to the right, and so on. Now lets say you're doing three hundred frames per second. You'll see straight ahead, 1.8 degrees to the right, 3.6 degrees to the right, and so on. Much smoother, and you'll be able to pick out details that wouldn't be there otherwise.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  6. Re:Uhhh... 4.4ghz... no. by AntiNorm · · Score: 2

    Dual processor machines arn't working in series, they're working in parallel. So, the computeing power is not simply added together.

    So they're like resistors (in that they add in series but not in parallel)?

    Rt = (R1 * R2) / (R1 + R2), so it would run at (2.2 * 2.2) / (2.2 + 2.2) = 4.84 / 4.4 = 1.1 GHz. Damn.

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  7. what is it good for? by dido · · Score: 3, Funny

    For an ordinary PC consumer? And let's not talk about Quake for this. Everyone knows that nobody can really see the difference between 40fps and 100+fps, so 3D gaming really is a shuck. Between today's modern graphics cards and even mid-range CPU's there's enough computing power to do high-quality 3-D rendering at high frame rates. I haven't upgraded my system (AMD K6-2 450) in two years, mainly because I've never found a good reason to do so. It does everything I need to do.

    What the hardware industry needs is a new killer app like DOOM was in the early 1990's. DOOM may have made Id software millions, but it made Intel and its cohorts billions in hardware upgrades. If all you want is word processing, spreadsheets, and a few games here and there, nobody in his right mind would use a gigahertz-class processor, unless MS and Intel are in cahoots in making Office XP the bloated monster it is! :)

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    1. Re:what is it good for? by OmegaDan · · Score: 3, Informative
      Everyone knows that nobody can really see the difference between 40fps and 100+fps

      This is true but you've missed the point ... FPS is a measurement of *average* framerate. Ultra fast cards are an attempt to raise the *worst case* performance of the card not the average case. A mere side-effect of this is raising the FPS.

    2. Re:what is it good for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      . Everyone knows that nobody can really see the difference between 40fps and 100+fps

      We should play a game of quake 3 and I'll set my fps to max and you can set your max fps to 40.

      I like seeing my fps in quake above 100. Anything less and you can see a statistical drop in my accuracy. Theres a reason companies like ati and nvidia are in the business they are in: fps matter. Heck a tnt2 can pull 40fps, why do you think people like geforce3 cards so much?

    3. Re:what is it good for? by WasterDave · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is a big difference between 40 and 100 fps, particularly if you have a monitor that refreshes at 100Hz. Not wishing to harp on and get even more off topic, but if you turn 180 degrees, aim and fire in a quarter second that gives you:

      40Hz 100Hz (apologies for lame fmt)
      Turn 6 15
      Aim 3 8
      Fire 1 2

      ..frames in which to perform the operation. Those couple of extra frames for aiming with actually do make a difference. I actually got noticeably better at Quake (particularly the rail gun) when moving to a faster card and an optical mouse.

      Back on topic, this is good for databases. Faster processors means fewer processors, less cache contention, good for all concerned really. And this is a really good move on Intel's part - rather than support a .18 micron part they really wish they hadn't made, in a socket they will use for precisely one processor, on a chipset for precisely one processor, they're swallowing pride and just getting on to the next one. Sensible. Very. Particularly when you consider how much the P4 needs its' on die cache to come up before it starts working properly.

      Mind you, it'd cost the same as my house.

      Dave

      --
      I write a blog now, you should be afraid.
    4. Re:what is it good for? by Ed+Avis · · Score: 2

      I think the driving force behind faster CPUs might be doing more stuff in software. Software modems, software Ethernet - in time, accelerated graphics cards may become unnecessary becuase the processor can do the 3d rendering fast enough. At the moment it is easier just to have dedicated hardware for this, but there will come a time when spending an extra $X on a faster CPU gets more improvement to your system than the same amount spent on dedicated hardware. So I don't necessarily treat USB2 as some kind of Intel conspiracy to force everyone into getting a faster CPU; it might genuinely be the cheapest and simplest way of doing things.

      In a way it's a pity for Intel that memory is now so cheap. If things had remained how they were in 1996, 'RAM doubler' type stuff which compresses pages of memory would now be commonplace. That would _really_ munch processor cycles...

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    5. Re:what is it good for? by ivan256 · · Score: 2

      If you think about the PC industry's history you'll realize that this is a continuous cycle. First a difficult task is handled in expensive hardware (Say a modem, or hardware encryption, or a raytracing coprocessor). Then the CPU gets faster, and people stop buying the expensive hardware and do the task in software (WinModems, Doom, ssl) to save money. Now that the hardware companies are motivated, and the software has popularized the task they can do volume production and sell the hardware on the cheap ("accelerated" modems, GPUs, system bridges with encryption built in) and the task gets offloaded again and the CPU can be used for the next big thing.

      Ethernet is going through this same cycle right now. Most cheap ethernet cards now have stopped doing their address table lookups (for MAC addresses) and checksuming and all the rest of the compute intensive stuff on the chip, and have offloaded it into the driver. This has happened gradually over the last 6 years or so. Now, with 10GB ethernet coming out, you can't process that stuff fast enough on the CPU, so it's moving back onto the chip along with other software like the TCP/IP stack. Ethernet is so intrenched in the marketplace that the manufacturers are guaranteed high volumes and can afford it.

      3D processors right now are far ahead of what you can do with current CPUs because of the limitations of memory bandwith, so I don't think that it's a task that's likely to make another loop through the cycle in the near future, but it will probably happen eventually. The real question is what cool technology that now requires additional hardware will soon become available to mainstream users? Video decoders seem to be in the software stage of the loop already, and are starting to move back into hardware by being embedded in regular video cards. Real time video encoding and editing could be the next big thing though...

    6. Re:what is it good for? by swb · · Score: 2

      Maybe we should just head back down the bus board route. Instead of having a (relatively) big motherboard with main memory and CPU and (relatively) small I/O cards (disk, scsi, network, etc), maybe we should have (relatively) simpler "processor boards" which host their own RAM and connect to a common bus. Modular connector(s) on each processor board could have adapters for various tasks -- networking, disk, video and so on.

      This way each processor board could be tasked to handle whatever it was connected to. Adding CPUs to a system for actual processing would mean adding a processor board. Adding functionality to a processor board would mean adding the appropriate connector for whatever you wanted it to do.

      This way we're not building as much specialized hardware to do a specific task. The bus could really be a half-smart switch instead to eliminate contention between processor boards. With general purpose processors running on the processor boards, specific OS functionality could easily be offloaded to individual processor boards, eliminating the need for the processor boards that actually host the OS to spend as much time manipulating dumb hardware.

    7. Re:what is it good for? by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      Go do a search for "NUMA architecture." You'll be plesantly surprised.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  8. Re:Uhhh... 4.4ghz... no. by ASCIIMan · · Score: 2

    Umm... so because hard drives have large capacities nowadays, it is useless to buy newer faster processors, because when you have lots of capacity, "resistance is futile"... hehe.. nerd puns!

  9. Speed is very nice, but.... by Splezunk · · Score: 3, Interesting
    What about reducing the power required, or the heat. How about the cost etc. I have no idea what really needs that sort of power? I know the Xeon is more of a server chip, so speed is important, but this trend is happening on Desktop chips too.

    All this speed is encouraging programmers to be lazy and not use good code that works fast, but rather rely on the hardware being fast.

    Just a bit of a rant...

    1. Re:Speed is very nice, but.... by Lostman · · Score: 2

      While it might cause programmers to get a little more lazy, I think it would be a very good thing.

      Everyone knows that hand optimized code runs faster than generated C... Linux was sped up 40% by optimizing 15%. When you have a good algorithm, however, we know that even a GREAT algorithm will not be as fast as hand optimized code. Having a faster processor allows you to work with higher and higher level algorithms -- it may not run as fast but when you get to speed levels that are exceptionally high, you should notice little difference.

      So programmers may get lazy.. who cares -- their code will follow established algorithms and be easier to modify.

  10. Quake and CPUs by Alan · · Score: 2

    From what I've heard, after about 900Mhz or so there is really no point in throwing extra cpu cycles at a game like quake. Classic quake would probably look about the same as well. I think at a certain point you need to either throw more video power at it or just realize that you've got room to spare for when the next game comes out (quake5 @ 2G anyone?)

  11. Video editing is a killer app by yerricde · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What the hardware industry needs is a new killer app like DOOM was in the early 1990's.

    This new app is video editing. After Effects filters run slowly because they have to run 60 times to each second of video. The sheer amount of data involved still makes video compression a very tedious process, even after spatial and temporal downsampling (i.e. cutting res and fps).

    --
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    1. Re:Video editing is a killer app by jhoffoss · · Score: 2

      Video editing is a good suspect, but while the cost of a computer has come down significantly, the cost of a digital cam-corder with which you can transfer and edit video is still high; let's not forget that, for the home user, there really isn't a ton of video editing to be had that I can imagine...

      --
      Linux: The world's best text-adventure game.
    2. Re:Video editing is a killer app by tcc · · Score: 2

      3D rendering, I'd rather buy motherboards with dual or even octal beasts than single cpu systems. Saves on space.

      Faster is better... until I can rayrace/radiosity/caustics/etc in realtime, I won't be satisfied :)

      --
      --- Metamoderating abusive downgraders since my 300th post.
    3. Re:Video editing is a killer app by edremy · · Score: 2

      the cost of a digital cam-corder with which you can transfer and edit video is still high; let's not forget that, for the home user, there really isn't a ton of video editing to be had that I can imagine...


      Your imagination is failing :^).

      Digital camcorders are cheap- I just bought a Sony TRV900 for $1500, and the TRV900 is close to the top of the line consumer machine out there. For not much more you can buy the same equipment that Spike Lee uses to make his films (Canon GL-1 and XL-1s.) Single CCD MiniDV camcorders go for $800 on the low end. All of these machine have Firewire interfaces.

      On the computer side, Firewire cards are $60-$100. If you have a Mac like my TiBook it's standard. (Macs also come with NLE software bundled- iMovie. Not as powerful as Premiere but just fine for home movies.) Disk and memory are so cheap today it's scary. I bought a DV <-> analog bridge for $250 so I can go either way with tapes.

      What am I going to use this stuff for? Well, I have a new baby. I'm putting together a video of him for relatives who aren't going to get to see him, such as his uncle who's stationed in Hawaii with the Army. Another copy is going to his birthmother. (He's adopted)

      I've been working on video of my wife's grandmother's farm as well. She's a tough old lady, but she is old and we don't know how much longer the farm will be in the family.

      What else? Well, the TRV-900 has the ability to do both time lapse and very high shutter speed photos- I'm having fun filming storms and water droplets. When the current ban on general aviation VFR flights is lifted I'm going to have do aerial still and video shots of the area.

      Video editing is never going to be immense on the level of word processing, but I think we'll be seeing a lot more of it in the future. Look at the huge growth in the digital camera market.

      Eric

      --
      "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  12. Spurred by AMD and IBM? by Zergwyn · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I wonder if this delay to increase performance might also be to head off IBM and AMD. Intel says that they will release the new Xeon in the 1st part of 2002. This coincides with AMD's roadmap plans to release its own server .13 micron processor(the Thoroughbred). In addition, that is about the time that the G5 is supposed to be released. While obviously neither Apple nor Motorola do servers, the G5 will be the first fully Book E compliant chip to come out of the AIM alliance, and IBM has plans for Book E chips. From IBM's site:
    Since 1991, IBM and Motorola have collaborated on the PowerPC architecture for personal computers, workstations, servers and embedded processor product lines, yet have developed and marketed separate implementations. Driven by the tremendous success of PowerPC microprocessors in the embedded marketplace, the companies announced in September 1997 the start of a joint effort to further enhance the PowerPC architecture to ensure greater consistency in their future embedded products. The Book E project and the new architecture it defines is the result of that effort.


    With the chips being 64bit and fully capable of supporting multiple cores, it could give IBM servers and workstations a boost. The chip architecture wars are about to start to hit another exciting stretch, as long research programs begin to produce results for Intel, AMD, and AIM. 2002 should be a big year.

  13. For pc-emulation by Baki · · Score: 3, Informative
    Such extremely fast computers might be good for virtual-PC environments such as vmware. You Windows-in-a-virtual-PC always takes a huge performance hit due to emulation, so much that it isn't even possible to emulate 3D graphics hardware acceleration (direct-x) in such products.


    Having an obscenely fast PC might make it possible to run Windows under Linux, and still have Windows including direct-x run with enough performance to do some serious gaming.

    1. Re:For pc-emulation by biglig2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you have a dual processor box, can you configure it to make VMware hog one processor and the host OS hog the other?

      --
      ~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
    2. Re:For pc-emulation by eric2hill · · Score: 2

      Since VMWare runs as a process that the host OS runs under, you cannot separate the two. You can assign VMWare to a single processor and the host OS will run only on that processor. Processor affinity is only really worth setting up if you're going to be running two VMWare sessions. Stick one OS on one CPU and the other OS on the second, and the OS'es will run simultaneously at about 85-90% of true full speed. It's rather nice for development since you can have a client and server on a single machine that is independent of your development and debugging setup. :)

      --
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      LOADING...
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      RUN
  14. 4:20 tech reporter by Perdo · · Score: 2

    Oh, thank god. What are we going to do without a 2.2ghz $2000 processor... Oh, get an athlon at 100 bucks a pop? ok! G5 anyone?

    "This is more than likely about shortening the qualification cycle and saving the customers a bit of money"

    That man is living a large at 4:20.

    Saving us money? whatever. It's a damn corporation in trouble. The last thing they are thinking is saving us money. Hell with 4:20, the man's on crack.

    --

    If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    1. Re:4:20 tech reporter by jhoffoss · · Score: 2

      You forget: you and I are not buying Xeons. Large companies that need the extra performance in a server are buying them. Two grand is a drop in a bucket in a corporate budget, and corporate folk would rather stick with the most reliable company (Intel) than some "Mom 'n Pop Shop" like AMD. There are certain advantages to those high-end processors aside from the speed, as well. If you saw Tom's Hardware's experiment with Two Intel chips and two Athlons, you know what I mean.

      In a mission-critical system (say a large database for orders) you can not, under any circumstances have that system go down unexpectedly. And if it does, it needs to be brought up again immediately.

      A corporate customer would rather spring for the Xeons and not have to worry about the system, rather than fill a server with cheaper Athlons and have to keep a few on hand in the slight chance that one of them ups and melts.

      You've gotta remember, you get what you pay for. OTOH, you or I are just fine with Athlons, Durons, Celerons, etc. They're cheaper, they're reliable enough for a home user, and they're more widely available.

      --
      Linux: The world's best text-adventure game.
  15. I'd like to see by rho · · Score: 2

    I'd like to see Quake running on this turdly P-133 I've typing on right now. Now THAT would impress me.

    --
    Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
  16. 2 x 2.2 = 4.4? How about... by green+pizza · · Score: 2

    the machine my university has been working with. 1024 x 500 MHz = 512 GHz ?

    Of course now the machine has been partitoned, so it's not quite that large, but at least there is still a "256 GHz" partition.

    Keep in mind that Origin is not a cluster, but a huge mother of a single-image machine. No backplane, but instead a mesh of CrayLink/NUMAlink cables interconnecting the CPU, I/O, and Router modules. My favorite part, though, is that with the addition of a "Graphics Brick" it becomes an Onyx. Add up to 16 G-Bricks!

  17. News: by popeyethesailor · · Score: 5, Funny

    I have heard that you *May* be able to run Windows XP on these machines..

    1. Re:News: by Snowfox · · Score: 2
      And what are you implying? I work daily on a P3-450 with XP and it seems responsive enough for me.

      Ditto here! I just finished booting the first beta and it's running spiffily on my P3-450.

      Next I'm going to try the other three beta releases that were mailed during boot-up!

    2. Re:News: by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      Actually, Windows XP will run quite well on the new Xeon CPU's.

      Remember, because Windows XP uses the Windows 2000 code base, it will better take advantage of the features of the Xeon CPU than Windows 95/98/ME, which is more optimized for Pentium II/III/Celeron CPU's.

  18. That's not enough to run Pong... by Juju · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, this might not be enough power to emulate the game...
    There was a discussion about this on the MAME discussion board (www.mame.net) saying that it would probably require 5Ghz machines to run a simulation of the circuits using the schematics of the game. Pong is an analog game, it's got no microprocessor nor ROM. So emulating it is mighty difficult!

    --
    Black holes occur when God divides by zero.
    1. Re:That's not enough to run Pong... by Jagasian · · Score: 2

      There was actually a University student that recreated the circuit diagrams for the Nintendo Entertainment System, and then he emulated the circuits, with with a virtual game cart plugged in.

      It actually took an entire night for the simulation to get to the game's title screen and fully render it. I can't remember the exact link for the guy's rightup on what he did (he even had screenshots), but I am pretty sure he did it about 3-6 years ago. I guess you could estimate that he had the simulation run on roughly a Pentium 100mhz. So, uhhh, maybe 5Ghz is a bit low, if you actually want the game to be playable.

      Still, if you really want perfect emulation of a game, its probably the best way to go, simulating the actual PCBs. Of course, you could always collect the real thing, which people do. Check ebay for such sales.

    2. Re:That's not enough to run Pong... by Jagasian · · Score: 2

      They both use the same CPU, the 6502, but the similarity ends there. You have to realize that the 6502 was a really popular processor for its time. It was basically the first poor man's RISC CPU.

      There are now open source implementations of the 6502 circuit diagrams.

  19. Let's Misuse Langauge by digital_freedom · · Score: 2, Funny

    From the article:
    "The (130-nanometer) process is ramping like a hose," said Frank Spindler, vice president of Intel's mobile products group.

    What the hell does that mean? How does a hose ramp?!!

    This must be the same guy who decided Pentium II mad sense.

    I tried to explain to my history teacher that King Henry the VIII is the same as King Henry Jr. the VI. She didn't buy it.

  20. Uses by jtdubs · · Score: 2

    I know everyone here loves to bash processors by saying they are too fast and there is no need for it. And, yes, you are partially right.

    The graphics of a game will not benefit from a 2.2Ghz over a 1.4Ghz processor as most of the work is offloaded to the video card.

    Same with sound.

    However, Artificial Inteligence will have that many more cycles to use searching state-space trees. That much more time to to prune and anneal its way to a better solution. More time to make more realistic artificial intelligence.

    That's one thing that you CAN'T throw too many cycles at. The more cycles, the better the results. It's that simple.

    Justin Dubs

    1. Re:Uses by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Artificial Inteligence will have that many more cycles to use searching state-space trees

      Completely true. However, ask a producer if they want to lose 10% of their bragging rights worth of frame rate or polygon count in return for an AI improvement that they won't be able to comprehend, and they'll stab you in the back and leave for 20% more stock options at another company. No, wait, first they'll tell you to forget the AI, then they'll stab you in the back...

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    2. Re:Uses by jtdubs · · Score: 2

      Hahahah. Sad but true. I still believe that eventually CPU will be meaningless for graphics as more and more work gets offloaded. Then it will just be a matter of using otherwise wasted cycles for the AI and physics work. I can imagine just telling the video card the camera orientation and position and having it do all of the rest of the graphics work. Wow, that'd be cool.

      Then, I would think, even the clueless producers would agree.

      You see, my thinking is thus:

      Right now they delegate around 10% of CPU time to AI, maximum. But, as graphics and sound begin to require less and less cpu time due to speciallized peripheral hardware, they'll be able to delegate more and more to AI. And physics. I can't forget physics.

      I guess I eventually see physics and AI being offloaded to specialized hardware as well. Some kind of state-specification meta language which can be compiled and uploaded to a state-space searching chip on specialized hardware.

      Same with physics and collision-detection calculations. These would probably be even easier to offload to separate hardware. Oh, that would be heaven. Having a real, dedicated CPU to use for AI calculations. Mmmmmmm....

      Justin Dubs

  21. So you could emulate Pong 102 times by swagr · · Score: 2

    See earlier post.

    This line is only here so that this otherwise acceptable post, passes the compression filter test.

    --

    -... --- .-. . -.. ..--..
  22. Erm.. we're not far from 2.5GHz... should I panic? by Lardmonster · · Score: 2

    So, we're not far from 2.5GHz - isn't that where microwave ovens operate?

    Should I be worried?

    matthew

    --
    The more advanced the technology, the more open it is to primitive attack
  23. 8085 by LazyDawg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The 8085 was an old 8-bit intel chip that could get more work done per clock than the 8086. The Pentium 3 does less work per clock than a 486 DX, too. This is getting to be a silly trend. We are not paying these people for innovative clock speeds.

    --
    "Look at me, I invented the stove!" -- Ben Franklin
  24. Question! by Tim+Doran · · Score: 2

    Is the Xeon just a P6 core with a ton of cache ram on-die? It's 1-2MB, right?

  25. FUD by ergo98 · · Score: 2

    The perfect example of FUD : "Well what if your fan popped off!" The reality is that while it is impressive that the Intel has systems to thwart that, how many times apart from on initial delivery does your fan fall off? As another poster mentioned it's the opposite and those things are a huge bitch to get off: I'd swear I was going to crack several motherboards in efforts to get those suckers off.


    That Tom's thing, while 100% extremist and pandering to Intel, was fascinating as I didn't know that the heat dissipation was so rapid.

  26. Re:Please inform me! by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 2

    Ah, now these are the comments of a silly fanboy who hasn't been around:

    The P4 has proven to be really good executing SSE2 float instructions - is a server likely to ever do a single SSE2 float instruction? Any floating point operations at all?

    Every Intel CPU since the 386 has been tagged by both Intel and the press as for being used in servers only. It's simply a way of saying "the price is outrageous at the moment."

    The P4 has also proven to have a really weak integer part.

    If "really weak" means "faster than just about anything out there," then, yes, I will agree. You might mean "really weak" as a way of saying "not as good as it theoretically could be," but it's still damn fast.

  27. Ugh by nuintari · · Score: 2

    Wen are people going to learn that dual whatevers do NOT make the PC twice as fast. I have dual 400's, I don't go around saying I have an 800 mhz pc, because I don't. I can't do any ONE thing at 800 mhz, I can do TWO things at 400. Loads of difference here peope.

    Call me picky, but I hate this misconception.

    --

    --Nuintari

    slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

  28. Re:And people gave me a hard time... by donglekey · · Score: 2

    Even if it was 128 bit the theoretical company would still never be able to break it. 128 bit encryption should be strong enough for anyone right now. Even if a dual 2.2 Ghz Xeon could try a trillion keys a second (which it obvously can't), 50 of them would still take 215,805,661,416,120 millenium to brute force a 128 bit key. So 4096 is overdoing it big time. It would be easier to crack you computer and log keystrokes for sure.