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HP Shows Off PA-8800 SMP-On-A-Chip CPU Plans

Eric^2 writes: "At last week's MicroProcessor Forum, HP's David J. C. Johnson unveiled the details of HP's latest RISC processor destined to redefine performance in Server-Class processors. Following a relatively simple strategy, the PA-8800 processor combines two PA-8700 cores on a single chip to enable symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) on a single processor. Aside from bumping the core speed up to an initial 1 GHz, enhancements include the addition of combined 35 MB L1+L2 cache. The article contains the full text. AMD, please steal an idea..."

2 of 176 comments (clear)

  1. Did I read that right? by ruiner13 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Did that say 35MB of L1 + L2 cache? I may be rusty, but I think I remember reading in my Processor Design for Dummies book that increasing cache size actually can slow down processor performance after a certain amount. Could someone please clarify this?

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    today is spelling optional day.

  2. Re:What about Itanium? by David+Breneman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Even last year, HP reps at the "HP World" conference were letting it be known that they were seriously hedging on the IA-64/Itanium/whatever chip due to Intel's notoriously crummy product reliability history. HP's got PA-8900 and PA-9000 chips in the pipeline. PA-RISC is not going away soon, if ever.