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Via Tech announces buyout of Cyrix

Veck was the first to send us the word that Via Technology (lately of partnership with Intel, as well as being sued by them) has purchased the Cyrix x86 line from National Semiconductor. Despite the huge parity in size, Via Tech seems eager to take on Intel. Update: 06/30 04:10 by S : To clarify: Via Tech will be purchasing the Texas division of Cyrix which makes standalone PC processors fitting into standard sockets (7, 370, and the like). The Colorado division which makes integrated processors (MediaGX) will be absorbed into National Semiconductor to address the Information Appliance market. Interestingly it appears that Via will also offer integrated products, therefore possibly competing with National.

74 comments

  1. Re:Could this be a result of AMD's new architectur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slot B is for Alpha and in the future will be used by K7 with more cache, it is similar to how Xeon uses slot 2 instead of slot 1.

  2. Re:IDT and Rise ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I did this too. Bios has no idea, chip works like a charm. It was money well spent and as far as I know, there isn't anything else at that speed in that power rating, so it's pretty cool.

  3. Re:Could this be a result of AMD's new architectur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I don't think that AMD really wants to get into the chipset business. They just need to provide the initial version until VIA and others come up with their own.

  4. Re:Cyrix is dead. by Chad+Page · · Score: 1

    The M2 has the fastest integer performance per MHZ for it's class... if it ran at 400-500mhz it would be competitive. If it had an integrated 128K L2 cache at that speed it would probably eat up Celerys. Alas, the fastest one is only a 250mhz chip, and w/o integrated L2. At least they're cheap.

  5. Re:VIA doesn't want the NT market (it seems) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My AGP G200 works fine with Linux, Xfree86, and an MVP3 FIC AT board (sorry -- I don't have the model exactly). I have never had any problems.

    I use Red Hat 6.0.

    I have friends who use Acclereated X and they have not had problems either.

  6. Re:finally, more competition.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You just had to use a real heat sink, man. I never had any problems with them. Do your homework on cooling, have no problems. Easy. Use a big sink and a paper-thin coating of paste and you are fine.

  7. Re:VIA doesn't want the NT market (it seems) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The specs are available. You can just write your own driver, if you want one. :)

  8. Re:Eh??? by KingBob · · Score: 1

    Dude, you send me the $$$ and I'll buy all the SCSI stuff you can name, but those of us in the real world have to make do with IDE, and on that topic, why should I *have* to add a SCSI controller to make up for the unadvertised shortcomings of the onboard I/O???

    As for your experience as a veteran, I commend you, but does that really have a bearing on *all* games, they are not all combat oriented - what about Flight Sims, Strategies or some RPG's, the number of machines I have battled with to try to setup these types of games for customers, despite the best efforts of evil hardware like Cyrix Processors, is quite outrageous?

    And why buy a console when your PC can perform more than admirably as a games machine, and output fantastic audio, given a little forethought in it's specification???

  9. I'll help hammer in the nails :-) by KingBob · · Score: 1

    I have three letters for you my son:

    F - P - U

    If your architecture is poor and you have weak Floating Point performance, it doesn't matter how fast you clock the bastard, it will still run like a dog in real world applications...

  10. Re:Eh??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, last time:
    1. Make do with less. What apps do you need size for? Databases or large data sets (GIS stuff, porn, whatever). If you need it, you need it, but I would argue that most don't. The difference with SCSI is so substantial that I would rather get a slow 4.5GB 50 pin than a 6.4GB IDE, both of which you can find now with a little hunting for $120 or so. I cannot imagine not using SCSI -- and I have tried out several nice IDE boxes on friends desks and in their homes -- all well and good and speedy until you have several things going at once (and these were largely IBM GXE [?] drives, with are 7500RMP IDEs and apparently the best that you can do). I paid out the nose for ISDN until recently. It was worth it, even when I was working overtime for it. I have paid out the nose for SCSI until recently, and it was also worth it. I think that you can go SCSI for less than you think, and I think that it is worth it.

    2. Yes, that was a silly comment for me to make. There are lots of non-shoot 'em up games. Sorry. My personal issues are also not at all well applied to most people (happily!).

    3. I like consoles because the simple text tends to focus my mind. That's all. You may not find WYSIWYG stuff distracting, but I do.

    4. On the sound front, I cannot give any quarter -- PC sound sucks. Good hi-fi is inexpensive, and a ten year old ... hell, even a 10 year old Linn would do better than listening through PC speakers. I implore you to visit a hi-fi shop with some of your favorite CDs and see why you want to make lots of money. The difference is night and day.

    Good luck, have fun, and it sounds like you want to wait for Christmas when the K7 goes to .18 micron and you will be able to get 4MB and 8MB of cache!

  11. Re:Eh??? by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
    I hate to rain on your parade pal, but the VIA MVP3 chipset is a piece of crap, I ought to know, I got lumbered with one!

    It's implementation of both the PCI/AGP and IDE bus is woeful...just try using any PCI sound card with one setup for UDMA...Snap, Crackle and Pop!!!

    Odd...I have such a setup here and have never run into the problems you describe. What board are you using? Mine's an FIC VA-503+ with an ATI Xpert 98 AGP and an Ensoniq AudioPCI. I've had two UDMA-compatible hard drives (a Western Digital AC35100 and a Quantum Fireball EX 10.2GB (don't remember the model #)) and both have worked flawlessly with the rest of the system. Maybe if you're running some PC Chips motherboard (or something equally crummy), you might run into problems...hell, PC Chips is almost a guarantee of problems of some sort. Given a decent brand of motherboard, though, you shouldn't have problems.

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  12. Re:cache, beautiful cache; VIA = big cache by Chad+Page · · Score: 1

    I've seen benchmarks where (at the same speed) the slower P2/P3 512K cache pulls ahead of the Celery's 128K cache in SMP, whereas in a uniproc environment at the same speed (and same FSB) they're usually even. Heck, mpg123 is a bit _faster_ (slightly) on a Celery :)

  13. Re:Cyrix is dead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of the same things can be said about Intel.

  14. Could Taiwan be the Japan of the PC industry...? by Chad+Page · · Score: 2

    A lot of _really_ good stuff is coming from Taiwan... and I wouldn't be suprised to see a couple of the smaller CPU companies get swallowed up by the other bigger companies... (Acer for instance makes or assembles almost everything BUT CPUs, and maybe power supplies. If they had a CPU vendor they'd have more or less the same pieces to play with that Intel does...)

    It oughta be interesting to see what happens with Cyrix/VIA now... VIA chipsets have been a bit slower than Intel ones (esp. slot 1), so the infusion of new IP might help. It's also good to see the Cyrix engineers not get laid off either... longer term C/V is probably going to be better off than AMD.

    The other thing to look out for is at least one company to start selling a whole 'package' if you will... like Intel does. Some companies can basically buy entire PCs through Intel and slap their name on (or maybe even have Intel put their badge on it in their factories :) AMD does _NOT_ have this, VIA might with the help of some of their subsidiaries like FIC.

  15. well, not quite by delmoi · · Score: 1

    Just like Intel fabs there chips in Malasia, and Costa Rica, Via will fab there chips in some other contry as well... and that hapens to be the US :P

    so dispite the fact that its a tiwanese company, there products will still be "Made in the U.S.A" heh
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
    1. Re:well, not quite by Mai+Longdong · · Score: 1

      In too many cases, Taiwanese companies have bought US companies, stripped them of their technological assets and then moved production to Mainland China, the Philippines or Indonesia. You don't REALLY believe they are going to continue paying US workers those high wages when they can set up in Fujian, Shenzhen or Subic do you?

  16. transmeta? by delmoi · · Score: 1

    what would a thread on slashdot be without a comment about the secretive transmet? not much, that's for sure! :P
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  17. Re:Could Taiwan be the Japan of the PC industry... by Mai+Longdong · · Score: 1

    Close to 80% of the world's hardware is now made by Taiwanese companies. Even Apple is doing it. Apple just signed a new contract here Quanta to manufacture Powerbooks. Check this: http://www.asiacomputerweekly.com/news/99/0628-04/ country_report/showart.cgi?article=cr061 9992803.html

  18. Re:VIA = big cache about equal to intel smaller by bored · · Score: 1

    Without verifying this I seem to remember that VIA is using direct mapped L2 (L3 on AMD K6-III:>) as opposed to the set associative caches Intel is using. This goes hand in hand with a study I remember where a direct mapped cache in general needed to be twice as large as a 2 way set associative cache to maintain a similar hit rate (read performance). So basically your 1meg (is equal to the 512k from intel hit wise) Of course there are latency issues here too that other readers have commented on.

  19. Re:grammar by SeanNi · · Score: 1

    I think that with the "collective intake of breath", he is alluding to the fact that so many people use them, that if a bug is at all serious, it could cause headaches for quite a number of people.

    (And of course, the fact that a lot of people use them infers that they're fairly good.)
    --
    - Sean

    --
    It's a fine line between trolling and karma-whoring... and I think I just crossed it.
    - Sean
  20. At least they'll still be around by kz1000 · · Score: 0

    Hopefully we'll see more stuff from them in the futire

    1. Re:At least they'll still be around by Sun+Tzu · · Score: 0

      Agreed. It does sound like they (Via) have a little cash reserve, in that they are bidding on a foundry also. I suspect that they may just know what they're doing and have a reasonable chance for success at it. Now, if I only knew what that plan was...

  21. Maybe..... by surfsalot · · Score: 0

    They might even make some good stuff...., but lets not go to far.

    1. Re:Maybe..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

      They already make some good stuff -- VIA chipsets have supported proper L2 caches for a long time -- I have a VP1 that must be 3 years old with 512k on the board and a 512k COAS module, a VP2 with 2MB L2 cache, and an MVP3 with 2MB L3 cache (with a K6-3/400; it would be L2 otherwise). They were made by (respectively) Hong Fen (well, it was $45), Abit, and FIC. All do very, very well. The VP1 supported parity and it has 256MB of parity SIMMs on it (recent upgrade when the prices dipped last year), and the other two do ECC. This is so nice. Remember, this was when the low-end Intel chipsets were limited to 64MB and wouldn't use parity RAM at all.

      VIA has made some good stuff, the MVP4 (look it up) integrates basic video and sound if you want that. VIA stuff has always worked with Cyrix chips (I know that this is more a mobo issue, but ...), they want to make integrated systems, they have been Linux-friendly to a degree for a while (less so than they could be, but hopefully that will change), and they do not try to artificially segment the market into stupid users and servers (i.e., by not making ECC stock with all shipping chipsets, like Intel)(and like Intel crippling the Celeron's SMP to protect their high end).

      VIA has been a cool company for a while. I will not by a board without a VIA chipset. Cyrix has been pretty cool for quite a while too.

      This is good.

  22. Could this be a result of AMD's new architecture? by nwalker · · Score: 2
    I wonder if this could be related to the new AMD/Alpha Slot B architecture, for which (I believe) AMD was planning to produce the chipset.

    Although Via would be able to make chipsets for Slot B - they'd be at a big disadvantage. Currently, if you buy a Super7 board, you're probably getting a Via. If you buy a Slot1 board, you're almost definitely getting an Intel chipset.

    If Via has to compete against AMD like they have to compete against Intel for chipsets, they have reason to be scared. And reason to buy the only other real legitimate chip maker on the market - Cyrix.

  23. grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    doesn't hemos mean "disparity" instead of "parity"?

    ps. cyrix is a really f$&^%d-up company. Their design methodology is the worst, due to their management's reluctance to accept the latest IC design tools. This leads to products that are slower and larger in die size than their competitors, and much later to market. They just don't know how to make a modern IC.

    I don't know about via, tho.

    -AC

    1. Re:grammar by stevied · · Score: 1

      Well, I've not had any problems with recent Cyrix chips; true, they don't cut it for FP stuff, but I don't need that anyway. Just make sure you have adequate cooling.

      As for VIA, no personal experience of their stuff, but I'm aware there's a collective intake of breath on l-k whenever there are bug reports that mention their chipsets.

    2. Re:grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is hard to tell Rob is usually the one derailing the English language. Perhaps he has lured Hemos over to the dark side too. Or perhaps Hemos is so giddy from getting his hands on all of that Andover money that he doesn't even care :)

    3. Re:grammar by unitron · · Score: 1

      Whadda ya bet he and Rob can spell "fully vested" just fine?

      (just kidding, I'm delighted for them and us)

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    4. Re:grammar by Black+Perl · · Score: 1

      The sentence doesn't even finish either. Paying what?

      --
      bp
    5. Re:grammar by hawkeye · · Score: 1

      And you're basing this on what? Personal, inside knowledge? I don't think so!!!

      Cyrix has some excellent engineers and pound for pound I'd stack their engineers against Intel any day. Intel doesn't have any advantaqe in intelligence, just in brute-force manufacturing prowess. Intel can afford to make dumb engineering decisions because they have great control over their process.

      And.... *yes*, I am basing these opinions on personal experience with *both* companies :-)


      Cheers,

      - Brendan

      --
      "...The smart and lazy ones I make my commanders." - Erwin Rommel
    6. Re:grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the bug report problems (which I guess you are alluding to)? Does Via not release information?

    7. Re: Re:grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps it is time for a mobo "Ask Slashdot" again!

    8. Re:grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would concurr. Intel really encourages a pointless level of immaturity in the engineers that work there. No engineer likes to be told that his or her design sucks, but at Intel they are allowed to scream and howl and pound the table and suggest that you have unusual ancestry. Everyone that I know who has worked with the Cyrix people has commented on how restrained they are and how much they listen. It is maturity, folks. Notice how infrequently you see old people at Intel? There is a reason that they don't stay. Or multiple reasons ... heart attacks, hypertension, and stress disorders ...

      I worked at Sematech as an undergrad and noticed this there with the Intel folks. One of the engineers didn't like the fact that the Phantoms would come in low over the smoking shack outside (they were coming into Bergstrom, right across the highway) and called the CO at the damned base to ask that they be rerouted! No, they weren't, and they came in very low and very loud for two months afterwards. Another engineer called the LCRA (the Lower Colorado River Authority) because he wanted to go tubing (you get in an inner tube and float down the river) and had heard that they were going to have a dam release. He called the LCRA and asked them to delay the dam release. Yes, he really did. And the Intel people were always complaining about the network, always complaining about the parking, just always complaining, to your boss if you provoked them (like by saying "No, for the seventh time, you need to fill out a form for that, and no, I will not install pirated software on your laptop.").

      I don't miss it. Sematech was cool, the Intel people were largely assholes.

      Intel is a company with a problematic corporate culture. It is going to take time to pry the abuses of Grove and his people out.

  24. Is Via from Taiwan? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    if so, I think its good that a non-US company is getting in on the act. Maybe they wont be subject to bribery like so many US companies are - i.e. discard their ethics any time a certain large software manufacturer waves a bunch of money at them. I think some of the atractiveness of Linux in the European and Asian communities is from their distrust of US companies (I leave it to you to decide which ones.) I think this is a Good Thing(tm)

  25. Anti-US chauvinism, anyone? by timothy · · Score: 2

    Bribery is widespread; are you suggesting that Asian and European companies are immune from it?

    In fact, Japan and Korea are home to some of the juiciest bribery cases (and accusations); a Japanese woman of my acquaintance says that bribes were a common occurance when she worked for 5 years at a large Japanese computer company, no names named.

    In fact, while Microsoft has been accused of many things, some of which are probably true, can you point out news stories where it is accused of bribery per se? I would be interested in reading them, but I haven't seen any yet.

    timothy

    --
    jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
    1. Re:Anti-US chauvinism, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I'm suggesting is that US companies have the *worldwide* computer industry by the short hairs. They dont call it Wintel for nothing. And they (MS and Intel) are the leaders in activities that are repulsive to (seemingly) most readers of this site: anticompetitive, chip-ids, etc. Bribery is my euphimism (sp?) for their habit of throwing large somes of money at a "problem" to make it go away. I thought that was obvious from the tone of my post. Apparently I was not succint enough.

      I still think non-US competition is a good thing. The US DOJ can't seem to do anything, maybe other countries governments will protect their companies from MS and Intel practices.

  26. Re:Could this be a result of AMD's new architectur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love my new handle! What is slot B? Can you point me to an URL with more information? Thanks, Gary

  27. VIA Can Use Slot 1 by Milican · · Score: 3

    WARNING: The following is all speculation.

    Intel recently kicked VIA out of the Slot 1 boat because of the 133MHz FSB and gave their competitor ALI the rights to produce the Slot 1 boards. So what is a poor chipset manufacturer to do.. oh wait.. Cyrix is for sale? Aha! VIA buys Cyrix so it can use the cross-license to produce Slot 1 boards again, and gain use of Intel's intellectual property. So VIA will now be in the boat whether Intel likes it or not, and as a bonus they get all the cool integrated stuff Cyrix was playing with. That's my take.

    JOhn

    1. Re:VIA Can Use Slot 1 by Gorphrim · · Score: 1

      Intel is of course claiming that the cross-license doesn't come with the Cyrix purchase, but rather remains with NSM. I imagine it'll take some time for the lawyers to work this one out.

      --

      Queens of the Stone Age - they rule
  28. Yes, they're Taiwanese..... by Mai+Longdong · · Score: 2

    And this news was in the local papers here 4 days ago. Now the Taiwanese will be making computers completely independent of the US. Should be an interesting ride.

  29. Errors in article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It clearly state AMD and Intel are the only other x86 manufacturers.

    What about rise and IDT?

    And someone mentioned VIA would be getting the cool integrated stuff as well as rights to Slot1. Well, my interpretation is that NatSemi are keeping the MediaGX line, and selling the plain standard 'standalone' processor line (ie 6x86MX)

  30. finally, more competition.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1


    VIA has a killer chipset to Intel's BX.

    Basically, it has the same features of the BX, but supports the faster PC133 Memory and has UDMA/66 support.

    Intel doesn't have anything like this until September, so Intel sues VIA to scare 'em.

    Now VIA can give 'em the middle finger and continue to give Intel competition. Only if VIA could take a Cyrix chip, not make it run as hot and make it the controller for a K7.. =)

    A Pentium equivalent processor that handles all IO for the system -- that would be plenty fast.

    If VIA succeeds, then we won't have to upgrade to DDRAM that Intel has invested significant amount of money into. I enjoy paying $70 for 128 megs of RAM and I'll enjoy paying less later. With DDRAM, I'd have to pay about 4x times as much.

    Good luck VIA!

    1. Re:finally, more competition.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HOT?

      I have never have hot cyrix's

      they are always low power 2.2v ones

    2. Re:finally, more competition.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Based on what tom of tomshardware has reported,
      it's currently 15x more expensive.

    3. Re:finally, more competition.. by JDevers · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should check out anything older than their M2. Only their newest chips are 2.2V. The M-II 300 was still 2.9 and ran hot as a fire cracker (and you don't even want to talk about the 6x86)...

  31. Faulty Logic. by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 1
    Cyrix doesn't make chipsets, never did. Why would VIA buy them if they were scared about AMD making *chipsets*?

    - A.P.
    --


    "One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promotional Ad

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    1. Re:Faulty Logic. by nwalker · · Score: 1
      Because if AMD starts making its own chipsets, that puts VIA out of the business of making chipsets - unless somebody (read: Cyrix) else should turn itself around and still needing Via chipsets.

      This is, of course, all wild speculation. =)

    2. Re:Faulty Logic. by Upsilon · · Score: 1

      AMD is NOT interested in the chipset market. They are working hard enough as it is. Like some one else said, AMD is only making slot-A/slot-B chipsets to get the ball rolling. They will gladly hand the market over to VIA, ALI, SiS, as well as some new companies such as Poseiden (who are making an interesting sounding 8 way chipset).

      It will be interesting to see what the VIA/Cyrix combination will have in the future. But, I'm more concerned with VIA abandoning supporting AMD to focus on integrated products with Cyrix than I am with AMD dominating the slot-A/slot-B chipset market. They simply don't want to.

      --
      I am not an idiot. Please use my name to email me.

      "That's right, I'm quoting myself."

      -Upsilon

  32. I disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Cyrix chips (M1 and M2 for instance) are very well designed.

    M2 is smaller than Celeron
    M2 is smaller than K6

    Mhz for Mhz, M2 is faster than P3.

    The only problem is they can't run at high mhz.

  33. Re:Cyrix is dead. by Erik+Corry · · Score: 1
    if it ran at 400-500mhz it would be competitive

    But it doesn't, so it isn't.

    You might want to ask why it doesn't. Perhaps the design isn't capable of going to high clock rates. Perhaps their process technology isn't good enough. Perhaps both.

  34. VIA... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, didn't they make the chipset for the FIC PA2007?
    I love that thing.
    Wow, if they did, Cyrix is gonna have a pretty good company behind them.

    1. Re:VIA... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the FIC VA503+ and the PA2012. All kick ass, to quote Cartman. I have been quite happy with mine, running a Cyrix MII 333 (503+) and two K6-2/400s (2012s). Speedy, 100Mhz, ECC (thank you Micron), and no problems.

  35. Eh??? by KingBob · · Score: 1

    I hate to rain on your parade pal, but the VIA MVP3 chipset is a piece of crap, I ought to know, I got lumbered with one!

    It's implementation of both the PCI/AGP and IDE bus is woeful...just try using any PCI sound card with one setup for UDMA...Snap, Crackle and Pop!!!

    Cyrix - cool, yeah right! You ever tried to install or play any games with one???

    1. Re:Eh??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get X going once or twice a day, I haven't had a sound card in years (no point, if you love music)(or, when Krell makes a sound card, I will put one in), I haven't had an IDE device in years -- all SCSI, and I cannot think of the last time I played one of those Doom-type games (two tours in Vietnam, not much fun). I like Pac-Man ROMs on XMAME (why I start up X).

      More to the point, I got a nice 21" tube because it is easier on the eyes and wanted a decent card to drive it. Got a Matrox G200 with 16MB RAM. I am not doing 3d modelling, but it seems to work really, really well. Perhaps if you want an SGI for cheap, it is not all that you wanted. I am more than happy -- 1280x1024 at 85kHz -- my eyes are happy.

      As for Cyrix chips and game players, well, more power to you kid, but I am not looking for that. I do database and records work and have been generally pleased with Cyrix chips. They have always been a damned sight less than Intel and work as well as far as I can tell. I have an MII 333 on my main box and I have been quite happy. Cost me about $45 too.

      I would suggest that you graduate to SCSI (DPT is nice). I would suggest that you get more RAM (if you get a Cyrix chip you can afford more RAM). I would suggest that you get a nice used hi-fi and see what good music can really sound like (old Krell is nice, but that is just me -- Krell, Maggies, and Schott are relaxing). Finally, I would suggest that if you want to do serious work, do your homework and you won't be disappointed by a chip that doesn't perform as well as you expected.

      As an aside, I hope that you keep enjoying Doom or whatever else you are playing. I am not trying to sound like an old fart. I just hope that you do not develop an aversion the same way I did (these days, I would think that the Balkans would be likely).

    2. Re:Eh??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you can judge a Mainboard or Chipsets quality if you are not using most of the functions on it. I suppose you are not even using an AGP card on the thing? If you are not using the built-in disk controllers and expansion slots how can you say how good the board/chipset really is? I happen to have one (VA503+) with an iP5MMX OC'ed to 280Mhz. I'm using IDE disks in the thing but I too don't use much in the way of PCI slots. It seems fine to me for what I am doing with it now - we'll see what happens when I throw a K63-450 (or 500) and an Nvidia TNTU or Matrox G400MAX at it and get a PCI soundcard.

    3. Re:Eh??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was looking for ECC and cache. I got ECC and cache. I am using an AGP G200 card and it works fine with XFree86 (no, I don't know why -- I loaded the SuSE stuff and it worked fine, my X experience is strictly user-level; as far as I am concerned, all serious work is done at the console and X is good for web surfing and games)(trn and lynx and MH do me just fine). I have had no problems at all with it at 100MHz with a rather fast chip and a lot of RAM. The fact that I cannot recommend the IDE stuff sort of begs the question of whether or not you can recommend ANY IDE stuff, and I cannot, unless you want a guarantee of delays and low speeds. If you want games, get a Playstation, that's what they are designed for. If you want music, get a stereo. If you are interested in DPA, then we are talking the same language and I think that my comments stand.

  36. Re:That's not how I remember it... by Milican · · Score: 1

    I would say Cyrix more than likely has rights to Intel's Slot 1, but how that transfers to VIA will be up to the lawyers. My guess is VIA is in the game and they will begin legally producing slot 1 chipsets. I can see no other compelling reason for VIA purchasing Cyrix. Sorry for not doing the research for the first post.

    February 3, 1998
    Intel Corporation (Nasdaq: INTC) and National Semiconductor Corporation (NYSE: NSM) announced they have settled a patent infringement lawsuit and extended the term of the existing patent cross-license agreement between the two companies. The settlement dismisses a patent infringement lawsuit filed by Cyrix Corporation against Intel in May 1997. Cyrix became a wholly owned subsidiary of National Semiconductor on Nov. 17, 1997. Under the settlement, Intel and National agreed to extend the term of their long-standing broad patent cross-license. Other terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

    Links
    National and Cyrix Press Release
    Intel's Press Release

    This info found easily thanks to Google. Google rules!

  37. IDT and Rise ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    C6 and mP6 are very-low-performance.

    And IDT is seriously thinking of getting out of the CPU biz.

    1. Re:IDT and Rise ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait a sec -- the C2 isn't great, but for those of us with Pentium boards who wanted something much faster and cooler, it was pretty nice, actually. For $38 I got a replacement for my P120 that is much faster with everything at the same power rating. It is fine, and hard to beat for the application for the price.

      And yes, it runs Linux without a problem.

      Please don't slam it without some understanding of what it was supposed to do (bring up the low end) and how it does it (quite well, thank you).

    2. Re:IDT and Rise ? by Gorphrim · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but IDT just announced more details on Winchip4. Why would they let all those investment dollars go to waste? Supposedly the W4 will hit 400Mhz+ this year with an improved FPU. The K7 will likely hit 800Mhz by the end of the year, but that's the extreme high-end where IDT has no intention of competing.

      --

      Queens of the Stone Age - they rule
    3. Re:IDT and Rise ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry - that is what I get for posting before my first cup of radiation protection -- I meant to say that I got a 200MHz replacement for my P120 for $38 that runs at the same power rating as the Pentium, making my life a lot simpler, and barely warms the heat sink. Really, it was a good purchase and runs like a top. I cannot criticise the C2 for the purpose and price and I have recommended it for those situations for friends and all have been pleased. My serious box is a K6-3/450 with 384MB and full LVD SCSI, replacing a K6-2/400 chip on the same layout (with a Via chipset with 1MB L2 cache, which is now L3 cache, thank you FIC!), and it runs like I would expect it to, considering that I spent a lot more than $38 on the CPU. Let's keep things a little in perspective here vis a vi price/performance. And let us not forget that not too long ago we would all have killed for the performance of a C2/200.

  38. Re:Could this be a result of AMD's new architectur by nwalker · · Score: 1
    Correction: this should have read 'Slot A'. I'm getting ahead of myself. =)

    You can find some good stuff on this new K7/Alpha archicture here.

  39. cache, beautiful cache; VIA = big cache by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

    VP2 chipset: 2MB
    MVP3 chipset: 2MB
    MVP4 chipset: 2MB

    Cache makes a huge difference. When the PPro came out, I was unamused to see that Intel was shipping with 256k L2 cache. With 256k, the PPro at 200Mhz was as effective as a 166MHz Pentium with 512k on the board, and it cost about 3-4x as much. The usual rule of thumb has always been (IIRC) that doubling the cache is the same as a 30% speed improvement. In my experience, VP1 chipsets with 133MHz Pentiums and 1MB cache would equal 200MHz Pentiums with 512k of cache (which I tested on the same board, pulling the second COAS module out and changing the jumper for the test and using the same chip with 2x as opposed to 3x multiplier). I recall using a Byte benchmark and (I think) Linpack. This was a few years ago, but with a baseline of a 133MHz Pentium with 1MB of cache, the results were basically:

    133MHz/512k 35% worse
    133MHz/1MB baseline
    166MHz/512kb 15% worse
    166Mhz/1MB 20% better
    200MHz/512k within a few percent of baseline
    200MHz/1MB 35-40% better

    I haven't tried anything like this lately (the cache has generally been on-board since then), but it really changed my mind, and made me really dislike Intel and Sun for not maxing out the cache. Cache is a good deal and worth the cash, not MHz, generally. Look at the best perfroming Ross boxes -- 1MB cache on 140MHz chips. Look at one of the reasons the PA-RISC kicks ass (HINT: it ain't HPhUX). Look at the benefit that cache gave to the Celeron.

    VIA has given us cache and continues to do so. For this reason alone, I will keep buying VIA only.

    I do wish that they would release more info and support Linux better, though.

    1. Re:cache, beautiful cache; VIA = big cache by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BIG difference. The Pentium Pro was designed with servers in mind, hence the smaller (although you can buy bigger) L1 cache running at full speed. Your 166Mhz Pentium will NOT perform as well for highly localized or parallel applications as a PPro at 150 or 200. Don't even TALK about SMP applications.

  40. Re:Could this be a result of AMD's new architectur by Gorphrim · · Score: 1

    Not to be obnoxious, but Slot B is for the Intel Xeon. AMD/Alpha is Slot A.

    Anyway, I don't think Via (or the other Slot A mobo chipset makers) will have to compete against AMD as they currently do vs. Intel. AMD is creating a chipset just to get things rolling, not to dominate the market as Intel does. I doubt AMD will push anyone to license their chipset, or make it difficult if that's what a company wants to do. The proliferation of Super7 boards has helped AMD and they will continue to groom these partners.

    --

    Queens of the Stone Age - they rule
  41. Re:Cyrix is dead. by guacamole · · Score: 1

    Oh, give me a break. The market a 233MHZ processor as M2-300 and and with their PR ratings clearly try to imply that it is just as good as PII-300mhz. But their integer performace is only just as good as the P300, and the floating math is worse than even the old good Pentium 233 mmx. I wish their stoped this PR rating crap. I myself try to evaluate the CPU speed by looking at SPEC results not the MHZ it can clock ..

  42. That's not how I remember it... by slew · · Score: 1

    As far as I know, Cyrix never had a license...

    Cyrix got use of the IBM x86 cross-license (back from the IBM/PC days) when Cyrix had their chips
    fabbed there, but no Slot 1 coverage.

    Cyrix got use of the SGS-Thomson (originally from Mostek) cross-license when they (almost) had their
    chips fabbed there, also no Slot 1 coverage.

    After they were purchased by National, they got the use of National's broad cross-license (both
    x86 and Slot 1 are covered).

    Via is in cross-licensing hell and they just bought Cyrix who never even had a license.

  43. VIA doesn't want the NT market (it seems) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    VIA could do everyone a favor and release an AGP driver for various operating systems. I have an MVP3 board that I run NT WS 4.0 on. I cannot use AGP cards in the thing because:
    "AGP support is not in NT - it will be available in the Next release".

    OK - why then is it that AGP cards work just fine under NT using Intel Mainboard chipsets? How about supporting your userbase a bit better VIA?
    I haven't tried using AGP cards under FreeBSD or Linux with this board yet, but it seems as though VIA thinks we are all Win95 users!

    1. Re:VIA doesn't want the NT market (it seems) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hm. I've used a EPoX VIA-based mainboard for a while, and AGP in NT is not a problem for me at all. My PCI soundcard is also working very well, no skips, no nothing.

      However, AGP have problems in Win9x (most matrox g200-drivers end in a BSOD or a special GSOD). In Linux and NT, there is no problems at all.

  44. that would be stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yeah well, but cyrix is not exactly a company making sneakers isn't it.

    they are design company, and their product is intelectual property, for this via buys cyrix. if they gutted the 300 people in cyrix, they won't have anything. *l* isn't that missing the entire point of buying a design team?

    plus, I think there is some worry in taiwan that their national economy is too depended on Intel. Imagine 30% of US economy is depended on 1 foreign company, you be skittish too.

    (remember how US was worryign about the big 3 back in the 80's?, now imagine only 1 and it's foreign....

  45. Re:that would be stupid. (Really???) by Mai+Longdong · · Score: 1

    You're right, we're NOT talking about sneakers. I'm refering to their actions taken in Silicon Valley.
    Think about it. (They've probably already got a factory site located in either Fujian or Shenzhen.) They send their top people to the States to work with the Cyrix design team (remember, the Taiwanese aren't a bunch of rice farmers). Meanwhile, another group is working in the manufacturing wing. In the not too distant future, manufacturing will be shifted out of the US and shortly afterwards, the design work also. Selected American employees will be kept on.
    Case in point, know the motherboard maker Tyan? They *were* the largest American motherboard manufacturer....they were bought by Mitac of Taiwan on 3 Feb 1999. Even before they were bought, Tyan boards were actually made here in Taiwan.
    FWIW, here is a quote from the Tyan-Mitac press release:
    "The MITAC-TYAN alliance, therefore, offers a unique combination that's bound to play a big role and leave its mark in the PC industry, a winning synergy that will add more muscle to MITAC's manufacturing and logistics capabilities. For starters, it will boost MITAC's motherboard capacity, already at 300,000 per month to 500,000 per month. It will also enhance the company's R&D capabilities, considering the fact that TYAN is undoubtedly an R&D powerhouse."

  46. Rise CPUs and Alt Os by Mai+Longdong · · Score: 1

    According to the people I talked to at Rise (in Taiwan) their new CPU 400mhz) should be out in August. It will be SMP capable but NOT over-clockable.
    A note, their product specs state that their CPUs have all been tested and run Linux, Unix and BeOS.
    If you can read Chinese, their site is at:
    http://www.risetec.com.tw
    For English:
    http://www.rise.com

  47. W4 details by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    They state that they are going to redo the FPU for faster floating point calculations. I wonder what they are going to go for in the FPU range. If they could over take the AMD in FPU power, that would be interesting. I think they might also do some more MMX stuff also. Winchip.com does't have any info on the W4 chip thou, which is strange becuase this information has been out for atleas a couple of days.
    I ate my tag line.

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-