IBM Releases Compiler for Power4 and G5
davids-world.com writes "IBM offers its optimized XLC compiler not just for Intel CPUs, but also for its own G5 processor (article in German at Heise). Unlike gcc, it is optimized for the G5 and achieves a major boost in speed, as first results show. I guess we will have to compare the new benchmark data (once available) with the data we get with the optimized Intel compiler for Xeon. The compiler is available for download now."
If the parent or grandparent had glanced at the PDF, they too would have noticed that GCC compatibility was one of the major points covered. There are a few pages devoted to what currently is compatible with GCC as well as what's planned. My bet is that they've had their own optimized compiler around since they first fab-ed one of these, to use for test purposes.
It would be foolish to scrap all of the work they'd already done, as well as the performance achieved (double the performance of GCC in some cases, from the PDF). There is mention of this compiler supporting SuSe Enterprise Edition however, but not enough detail to tell if it can compile SuSe or just compile *on* SuSe.
If there is a plan to integrate stuff from this compiler into GCC, my guess is that GCC compatibility would be the first step. It would be very difficult to try to integrate the two if they have fundamentally different structures and no common ground to speak of, not to mention that fact that chip manufacturers invariably keep the true capabilities of their hardware more or less secret until launch time, and putting code into GCC from the beginning may tip their hand to others before they're ready to do so.
obDisclaimer: IANACompilerGuru
That's not really true at the high end. The P4 doesn't support multi-processor configurations, and Intel charges a major price premium for Xeon chips. Dell wants ~$4000 for a dual 3 GHz Xeon with specs similar to the $3000 dual 2 GHz G5.
You could probably do a bit better building your own dual Xeon system, but it still wouldn't be cheap. You're looking at probably $1300-1500 just for the motherboard and the chips -- then add a case, RAM, a hard drive, a DVD burner, a video card, etc. and, for most potential buyers, a copy of Windows XP Pro.
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Do your homework. Apple modified the tests to reflect the actual shipping models, since they were running on prototype G5's. These issues have long been put to rest and Apple just updated their results the other day with actual shipping G5's. Get out of denial, x8 is not a religion, it's a processor for goodness sake.