New info on IBM's Power5 chip (G5's)
phreemind writes "There's some news out today on IBM's Power5, which should make an appearance next year. Interestingly, from the sound of this article, they've put a lot of work into power consumption on this processor so that it can go in anything from blades to big iron. This may preclude the need for a specialized low-heat/power version, such as the 970, for anything other than laptops. Oh, yeah, and they hope to use it to wipe Itanium off the map. Check out the article at InfoWorld."
The G5 is the long overdue Motorola successor to the G4.
The Power5 is the successor to IBM's Power4.
While the architectures are closely related, the Power4 and G4 are distictly different chips, and the Power5 and G5 will be too.
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The [IBM] xSeries team has an Itanium box, and we are out to make sure Itanium doesn't survive ... the pSeries team hopes to relegate Itanium to a niche in high performance computing or better yet exterminate the processor altogether.
Wow, it's great to see some real red-blooded competitive engineers again. This is how good stuff gets done.
A couple years ago they would have been squashed by the PR deparment for casting ill light on a potential relationship with a potential business partner.
Maybe there is hope for IBM afterall.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
I don't think quoting somebody saying that they hope they can squash Itanium with the Power5 counts as facts.
Are there any links in regard to performance/price/heat of the power5 chip anywhere? Or is this just like normal hype regarding a potential product?
Just curious, it's not like I'll have the money to buy the thing...
The G4 are the 7xxx series: 7410, 7441, 7445, 7451, 7455.
What's curious is that the PowerPC G4 (7400 series) processors have part numbers eerily similar to the names of discrete logic parts: 7410 is a triple 3-input nand gate; 7441 and 7445 are 4-bit BCD to 7-segment LCD signal converters; 7451 is a dual AND-OR-INVERT gate; 7455 is a 2 wide 4-input AND-OR-INVERT gate.
Will I retire or break 10K?
So is there any chance that they will ever move the instruction set away from its 16 bitness? To load a 64 bit constant, you either have to have a relative memory address or use 5 instructions with the 64 bit PPC modules. Jumps are great too as long as they are within something like 21 bits. While you can deal with massive amounts of memory, it takes hacks that make the segment offsets in the 8086 look like an elegent solution.
Is there any reason to think apple would use Power5 for anything? Even though they should, so that they can make a nice fast desktop computer...
There has been speculation about apple using the PPC970, though. I guess it depends on whether Power5 is at all suitable for a desktop machine (i.e. power and bus requirements).
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