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Subject: Re: What new chip will come in the next year?

Author: leonid

Date: 09:50:09 11/07/02

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On November 07, 2002 at 11:39:03, Eugene Nalimov wrote:

>On November 07, 2002 at 10:03:27, Vincent Diepeveen wrote:
>
>>On November 06, 2002 at 19:51:44, Dann Corbit wrote:
>>
>>>On November 06, 2002 at 18:18:46, leonid wrote:
>>>
>>>>Hi,
>>>>
>>>>What really new is expected to come in the nearest 10, or 12 months from now?
>>>>What new chips, or some kind of new technology that will come to speed, or
>>>>change something in computer world? How much new arrival will influence chess
>>>>programming, after Your personal understanding?
>>>
>>>We'll have the 64 bit chips then, both from Intel and AMD.
>>>Probably, in one year, you will be able to get a reasonably priced workstation
>>>with 64 bit addressing and native integer size.  I expect it will help the
>>>bitboard programs a lot.  But I could be wrong about that.  Time will tell.
>>
>>I assume you speak here about the intel McKinley itanium 2 which is $7300
>>a piece and 64 bits with a load of registers and 3 MB L3 cache.
>
>For less than $6k you can buy the complete Itanium2 system,
>http://www.hp.com/workstations/products/itanium/zx2000/summary.html
>
>Yes, it will have "only" 1.5Mb of L3 cache. But, according to Intel
>(http://www.intel.com/pressroom/archive/releases/20020708comp.htm?iid=ipp_srvr_proc_itanium2+info_20020708comp&)
>
>"Itanium 2 processors will feature 3 MB and 1.5 MB of integrated L3 cache and 1
>GHz and 900 MHz frequency speeds at prices ranging from $1,338 to $4,226."

This already look like to be very close to accessible price!!! I hope it will be
not that long before price will go below 300$.

Leonid.




>Still less than $7.3k.
>
>>It's a great chip.
>>
>>The Hammer i do not see as a 64 bits chip in the true sense. It's having
>>a few 64 bits extensions like the P4 and the K7 already have. Just a few
>>more now i assume which with some luck are usable for computerchess this
>>time.
>
>Wrong. It has 64-bit registers and 64-bit linear address space -- so it's real
>64-bit CPU by any definition.
>
>Thanks,
>Eugene
>
>>Best regards,
>>Vincent



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