K8 Details
Urban Dragon writes "Cnet has a story on how AMD will be giving details of it's K8 chip next week. The K8 will be competing with Intel's Merced chip. It should be interesting to see which comes out first.
" Maybe it won't run as hot, either. I mean, I'll want one regardless, but...
I love it if you can't beat their marketing machine slaughter them with technology and speed to market.
So much for the K7 eh? Shame...cause I was going to upgrade my K6....
is it going to be 32 or 64 bit?
And will be 18-micron?
This is just pure speculation, but if the K8 is going to be a 64bit chip it'll need a new instruction set. Isn't the Alpha a pretty damn good 64bit chip with and instruction set that's already supported by Linux, NT 4.0, VMS, and Tru64? Why doesn't AMD either use the same instruction set or start making Alphas (or RISC chips that can also run x86 binaries)? Basically, we have x86, RISC (and many RISC platforms, by the way), and Merced/McKinley. Why are we going to need another instruction set? Maybe AMD will just highly optimize their x86 processors. I'd rather see that than yet another platform.
By the way, wouldn't it be nice if an EV7 motherboard could handle either a K7 or Alpha? We could buy one motherboard and choose between CISC or RISC. Imagine upgrading from an Athlon to an Alpha. There are so many cool things AMD could be doing right now. I just wish we could see some action.
I would wonder how AMD would name it's next gen chip. K9?(I know it's off-topic but....)
Following its architectural triumph with the Athlon chip, Advanced Micro Devices next week will detail the K8, a 64-bit chip that will compete against Intel's Merced.
Very nice, unfortunateley it's not a question of having a good CPU architecture, but to a much larger degree a marketing question. I don't doubt that AMD can design a good K8 chip, but in order to do that, they first have to make the K7 a success. They are pretty strapped for cash and unless they can stop bleeding red ink, they might not even be around long enough to see the introduction of the K8. So they can design decent CPUs. This is good, but hardly news. In the past they had good chip designs falter due to manufacturing problems. Lets hope they can ramp up K7 production fast enough so they have a product to sell.
Having said that with a light undertone of sarcasm, I should probably note that I am/was a satisfied AMD customer. I wish them well because Intel deserves some competition, but they need to be careful not to repeat past mistakes. They have to become profitable soon, which is no easy task when you face a giant like Intel.
I would have liked a much more in-depth discussion of the motherboard support required - can any of you solder-heads out there enlighten me?
Strong data typing is for those with weak minds.
The chip will rock if they can get production lines going. They will need all the help they can get though. Maybe they should talk to IBM and Motorola whose Power PC already has specs for 128 Bits and clock cycles of 1 & 2 gigahertz. The company has had a long history of playing catch-up with Intel. They can pull ahead in terms of speed and cost if they just produce enough chips. Personally, I always liked the company and its products. I still have a 486 DX4-100 from them. It zooms along just fine.
Romanes eunt domus? People called Romanes, they go the 'ouse? It says Romans go home. No it doesn't. What's Latin fo
Patrick Barrett
Yebyen@adelphia.net
Restating the obvious since nineteen aught five.
I'm taking it as something of a given that AMD hasn't really gotten a decent break on the Athlon. CNET's article points out that despite the fact that the Athlon chips have regluarly beaten the pants off Pentium IIIs, but they haven't been able to make a comperable dent in the market, largely due to their inability to procure parts. Hardly anyone is making Athlon mobos, which is a damn shame.
That being the case, what are the chances for the K8? They'll be intended for a much more limited market than the Athlons to begin with. I can't see a mobo manufacturer nervous about ponying up resouces to make Athlon stuff being sold on the K8. Throw in the tendency of corporate users to by the safest solution, and AMD may be screwed.
I really hope we're not in for yet another round of the "superior tech can't get an even break" game.
As for the size, that will depend on what's available when it arrives.
I sincerely hope that the K9 chip debuts in a dog shaped grey case on wheels, and wanders about saying "Master?"
Maybe AMD plan to license Transmeta's technology to emulate IA-64.
Patrick Barrett
Yebyen@adelphia.net
Restating the obvious since nineteen aught five.
It seems to me that a year ago I was reading how the K6-3 and eventually the K7 would be bring AMD out of the low-end desktop market into the high-end desktop market. They could be *gasp* faster than Intel on the desktop. The K6-3 did that and has been selling well.
Now the line is that the K8 could bring them into the server and multi-processor market. Never quite good enough for the journalists, eh? No one seems to be noting that this company has gone from making 486 clones after the 486 was being fazed out by Intel to creating a chip that was cheaper and faster than Intel's best offering (excluding the Xeon's which are only overpriced Pentium III's with tons of L2 cache).
On top of that, they are selling! AMD beat Intel in retail sales for a quarter! Big guys like Compaq, Gateway, and Intel are selling them in their systems! If you would have told me 2 years ago that AMD would beat Intel in sales and that you could buy one in a Compaq, I would have tried to sell you some nice swamp land in Florida.
As far as AMD bleeding red, look at any company playing catch up or expanding as quickly as AMD and you will always see a trail of red.
The Athlon is testing at 900megahertz and 1000megahertz. AMD has boxed and ready to go large shipmets of 800megahertz Athlons. I'd say that any investment in an Athlon is a safe one. Just think, buy that Athlon 600 Monday when the 700 is released, get a great deal on a processor that outperforms a PIII650 and have a system that you can upgrade to 800 or 900 by the end of the year or early 2000.
One strange thing I've seen with Athlons..
Several companies round here actually have the Athlon chips in stock.. They're advertising them across the web by mail order...
Yet not a one of them advertises a mother board...
As far as I can see, this is going to kill enthusiasm faster than anything else... People going out to buy the chip and board, seeing the chip present, but not being able to do anything with it other than use it as a paperweight...
Womething has to be afoot to keep the motherboard manufacturers at bay like this... It seems AMD have the chips there, but the M/board manufactures are holding back..
I'm still drooling here, and waiting, but feeling more disenchanted as the days pass, and still not board to be had...
So, any motherboard makers out there.. Get into gear guys, there's easy money to be had...
Malk.
Might have been more interesting if it were the actual detail announcement. Things like number of simultaneous real-world instructions per clock, support for predicated instructions, register counts and windows, demands upon compilers...
Pure clock speed ain't enough, folks. Judging from (dated) info about the IA-64 architecture, there's a lot of nifty stuff that AMD has to at least match if they want to claim any sort of lasting advantage.
Only the dead have seen the end of war.
Just a guess but I think it's named after the Coppermine River, a Northern Territories river that joins the Arctic Ocean at a town called Kugluktuk (formerly named Coppermine). This would fit with Intel's other river coenames like Merced and Willamette, etc. But that's just a guess.
Die you damned moron.
its so nice to see someone giving intel some real competition!
now intel needs to remove that little "watermark" that is present in pIII chip in the merced chips.
maybe ill consider buying a new pentium then, until then its going to be AMD for the x86 machines.
and lately everytime i think of chips g4 lingers in my mind. no matter how much you dislike macs all of us have to admit g4s make you horny. well unless you can afford a alpha heh
tyler
The slowness of release of Athlon-based systems appears to be related to, surprise, surprise, a dearth of availability of motherboards. I wouldn't want to be accusative of Intel for formenting this, but I'm sure they're very grateful at the inability of AMD to sell massive quantities of Athlon chips...
Every time a new CPU comes out, the real insight comes from looking to the motherboards...
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
As of Oct 4 price cut Athlon 600s are going to be much cheaper than Intel 600s. Numerous reviews have showed that Athlon is 10 to 40 % faster than Intel's whimpy P3. What we see now is a great product that is early in its life span and introduction. With VIA KX133 chipset and more proven motherboards I look for K7 to dominate in certain market segments like scientific computing and artistic rendering. There are a lot of people taking a wait and see approach to the Athlon. And most of the early motherboards have been rock solid. Once Tyan releases their motherboard in November and is able to get good quantities then more OEMs will start to switch. Dresden has been a giant financial weight around AMDs shoulders that should lift once it comes into production Q1 00. The P3 will simply not be able to keep up. Athlon 800s are already in production. It will be interesting to see how long Intel stalwarts like VA Systems can hold off from AMD once the SMP Athlon boards are out that provide 50 to 100 speed difference over sucky Intel GTL+.
This is an announcement of an announcement of a product I doubt is barely in design. The only point of it is to say that big new is coming at the Microprocessor Expo. Even then its going to be vaporware to the nth degree. I doubt that the feature set is even fully hammered out yet.
I think it is closer to the Detriot Auto expo where GM, Ford, etc get together and show off concept cars that will likely not be produced within the next 10 years.
several vendors at www.pricewatch.com have athlon/mobo combos in stock and ready to ship for less than $400...and have had them for a couple weeks.
and don't forget, in addition to buying a motherboard, you'll most likely also need a new power supply.
The Athlon needs a minimum of a 300W peak PSU, and i don't know of any cases outside of big server cases that ship with 300W+. Most desktops and small towers have 200W, and midi/full towers tend be around 230-250W. Run an athlon in one of those and it'll be unstable as hell.
High power PSU's are pretty tricky to find aswell.
I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
Just a quick comment on that, AMD doesn't have a problem with finance management, at least not any more than your typical company. Their problems largely rooted in the following two factors:
1) AMD's sixth generation processor design was put together decently, but with a very shallow pipeline. This means that with your typical ramping schema, it should be at about the same MHz level as the Cyrix chips (300MHz) or the WinChips (250MHz). As it is, AMD has an immensely aggressive ramping team which has managed to bring AMD's K6 family to just under Intel's P6 family in MHz, which has a couple effects:
(a) Because the K6 family has been historically about two clock bins lower than the P6 family, and because Intel's pricing schema involves tremendous gulfs between the top two clock bins and all below it, AMD's cpu Average Selling Prices could not help but drop lower and lower as time progressed.
(b) Due to the K6's low pipeline and the fab team's uncomparable (and absolutely necessary) aggressiveness, the bin split of the K6 family parts are HORRENDOUS. Before AMD's recent jump to their cs44e7 hybrid process (quarter micron with some 180nm features), the top bin being produced was 475MHz and the bottom bin was still way down at 333MHz or so, with over half the parts still binning below 400MHz. This added more shame to their ASPs, as anything below 400MHz was under a hundred bucks, which means something like only fifty dollars profit per chip, at best.
(c) As a result of the aggressive ramping they needed (to compete with Intel's more easily rampable design), yields were kept lower than comparable Intel parts (though for the most part not horrendous, save for the little "incident" in February). This means that they get lower quantity to sell than they could have gotten otherwise, which means that, in addition to ASPs, they're making very low amounts of revenue.
2) There really is no way to get past problem 1a without making a newer cpu core with a deeper instruction pipeline. And to get past the problem in 1b, while that newer cpu core will help, it'd really be the wiser choice to expand your capacity, so AMD has forced themselves to spend a whopping, Intel-like amount of money (in R&D and in building a whole new megafab) so that, while they hurt in current quarters, they can thrive in future quarters. Would this strategy work? It's not guaranteed, but it's a hell of a lot cooler than the old "play it safe" mentality. If AMD had played it safe and not done all this fab or R&D stuff, then they'd have easily made profits (I believe) off the K6 series in every quarter of 1998 and 1999. The only problem is that they'd be lagging in clock speed at this point and they'd have no real future technology with which to compete. In effect, though they'd be profiting, they would be writing their own tombstone. The way they're doing it now, they've lost lots of money but they *finally* have superior technology to work with. Even without that newer fab, as soon as they ramp K7 to at least 60% capacity, they'd be making a pretty solid profit. With the newer fab, they'll be able to profit very nicely and retroactively fund these projects that they so unharmoniously dumped cash into all these years. They'd also be able to afford their future plans, which is a nice byproduct.
-JC
PC News'n'Links
http://www.jc-news.com/pc
PS: This stuff is largely my opinion, though I believe it to be largely based on fact. It isn't merely a pipe dream that leads me to believe that the K7 is the first design since the 486 that offers everything AMD needs to absolutely thrive in the market.
No H. "Dalek" is an anagram of "Kaled", remember.
I liked the fourth doctor (Baker #1) best, myself. Most of the time. Pertwee was cool in his own way, though, if maybe a bit... dunno.
Berlin-- http://www.berlin-consortium.org
DNA just wants to be free...
A year and a half ago, all we heard was "K7 is going to put Intel out of business. They are going to be for sale signs on all of Intel's fabs and they stock is going to tumble".
A year and a half later AMD losses are at an all time high, K7 hasn't made any dent in sales, and I can't even see one at Best Buy.
This is largely due to the pre-announcement effect: everybody heard about K7 and delays purchases of AMD chips(when they would have bought a K6).
Now they announce the K8 when the K7 is barely ready for production. This is going to have the same effect. Consumers are going to say, "Why should I buy K7 now when K8 is coming out Really Soon Now?" They'll probably just buy Intel.
Willamette/Foster will be out by the time K8 is. What has the world heard about that? Very little. Almost no details have been made public.
Intel never makes the details of a processor public to the industry until it it ready for VOLUME production. Often their published figures are lower than expected, so the compeititors feel comfortable and slack off, then they grab the crown from out of nowhere (P6 is the prime example, and Willlamette/Foster will do the same).
This is the reason Intel is more successful than AMD - they don't preannounce, so they can sell chips they can fab in volume NOW, and not tell customers "don't buy what we have now just wait a little while longer and we'll have this whiz-bang part" (OK, they didn't do this with Merced, but they have with everything else)
If you think Williamette/Foster is a retail chip that can compete with K7s that will be at 1200+ mhz in one year, you better think again. AMD is losing money due to Dresden. When Dresden comes on line producing copper K7s at 1000mhz and more there aint a damn thing Intel can do. Even copper P3s wont go beyond 1000 mhz. Pre-announce? Jesus you are an idiot. Who has been spewing 6 years of Merced BS that hasn't gotten me a chip the equal of the K7?
as much as I like amd by the time any of this comes out we should be seeing some really powerful IBM G5 1ghz processors with two chips on one core, copper interconnects and SOI. Also some really fast alpha should come out and so should the new UltraSparcs. The K8 will be great put it will compete in intel's market segment in which intel will use fud to cause some issues to arise
Or, AMD buys Transmeta, and incorporates their purported instruction emulation technology, so that it doen't really matter what the natve instruction set is, it will simply emulat the IA64 without patent infringements. I suppose. I'll be the first one to admit I don't know what the hell I'm talking about. ;-)
I came across this in one finnish newsgroup, i'll try to translate it with (don't expect perfect english, then) - I wrote letter to MicroStar (MSI) and wondered how they had AMD Athlon motherboard on sale, but no mention of it in their www-pages, the answer confirmed all we've feared and what for example Tom's Hardware has been telling about pushing methods of intel: My question was if MSI 6167 was a working, MSI officially supported product, which can be safely acquired. The answer from MSI Germany was following: "The mainboard is a fully functional product from MSI. The reason that we do not promote it, is a stratetic reason which you can find out if you know the PC market very well." Thing about that, you can't tell more straight than that what's happening behind the scene. Same day i also met a person who, when working for Fujitsu has been witnessing same kind of process: Intel blackmailed Fujitsu out of AMD immediately they heard that Fujitsu was even thesting their processors. Explains much of the market situation, doesn't it? Should we feel great sympathy for intel and establish a popular movement to maintain their monopol so the poors wouldn't need to resort to rude blackmailing policy which is loss of the customers (and AMD). And yes, there is probably quite much of them reading this who understand and accept the restricting of free competition and state "AMD would do the same in their position", which is something we don't know, and anyway, this thing is sick and at least not our advantage. -
The K8 will most likely be a 64-bit Athlon Ultra that may or may run on a Slot-B configuration. 64-bit capabilities on an Athlon would be nice, but since there aren't very many 64-bit operating systems out there, and even less software packages to accompany those, a 64-bit CPU isn't all that wonderful at this current time--give it about 3-4 years before a 64-bit CPU might start to look appealing for home use. But the K8 will be analogous to Intel's Xeon processor as was the Pentium Pro--it's a server chip, not one for your home CPU. -JGene
His comment was not flamebait.
"You are only young once, but you can be immature forever." -www.animemusicvideos.org
everything about the K8 architechture there is
just 100% rumor and speculation.
Somebody thinks "64bits is better than 32 bits,
intel is desgning 64 bit chip (merced),
so of cource AMDs next chip should also be 64bit.
But this has nothing to do with reality. the register said this same hoax first, when they understood they were wrong, they posted "amd has changed their k8 architechture...". But too many people read the hoax, and didn't read the "correction"
extending x86 to 64 bits - nonsense.
noone would support it, and the lack of registers, not the size, is the major problem.
When AMD does the announcement, We'll all see, that it's just a nother normal (3/x)86 processor. The futrher the rumors get before that, the more false information is on the move.
And if AMD can make a K7 that puts out less then 50 Watts of heat I might buy one. The thing is just too damn hot to work reliably. If I wanted to put up with that kind of heat problems I would just buy a cheapo chip and overclock it.
Then what does J&J Patient Care rename their lubricating jelly to?
I have a novel idea: It's an electronic component, right? Let's give it an electronic-style part number. Since it's compatible with the 8086 processor, let's call it something like the 80986 or the 81086 shall we?
the K7 and K8 sound fast but don't you NEED a PIII if you want to use the internet???????
I have a amd 550 althlon on a fic mobo .Asus ran like sissy boys ....fic mobo are 179$
the mobo have no problem but intel
intel said u make mother boards we
wont give u info
so now we got 3 k7 mobo makers
BTW i am getting a 10,000 cpu score on mine *drool* in 3dmax