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Ars Technica's Hannibal on IBM's Cell

endersdouble writes "Ars Technica's Jon "Hannibal" Stokes, known for his many articles on CPU technology, has posted a new article on IBM's new Cell processor. This one is the first part of a series, and covers the processor's approach to caching and control logic. Good read."

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  1. Interesting by patryn20 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    It is interesting to note that he uses the same terminologies and conclusions that he lambasted another author for. Wow. Hannibal is a hypocrite.

    Specific Example: Locally Addressable Memory vs. Cache.

    Granted, he may simply have not had access to the information at that time (doubtful, since the article he critiqued was gleaned from the patent application), but he was vicious in his dissection of the article. Does anyone know if he ever appologized for being a moron towards Nicholas Blachford?

  2. No CELL for Macintosh... by dtjohnson · · Score: 1, Redundant

    In part II, he writes:

    "Finally, before signing off, I should clarify my earlier remarks to the effect that I don't think that Apple will use this CPU. I originally based this assessment on the fact that I knew that the SPUs would not use VMX/Altivec. However, the PPC core does have a VMX unit. Nonetheless, I expect this VMX to be very simple, and roughly comparable to the Altivec unit o the first G4. Everything on this processor is stripped down to the bare minimum, so don't expect a ton of VMX performance out of it, and definitely not anything comparable to the G5. Furthermore, any Altivec code written for the new G4 or G5 would have to be completely reoptimized due to inorder nature of the PPC core's issue.

    So the short answer is, Apple's use of this chip is within the realm of concievability, but it's extremely unlikely in the short- and medium-term. Apple is just too heavily invested in Altivec, and this processor is going to be a relative weakling in that department. Sure, it'll pack a major SIMD punch, but that will not be a double-precision Alitvec-type punch."