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Subject: Re: Where are 64 bits machine?

Author: Dann Corbit

Date: 12:17:30 03/18/03

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On March 18, 2003 at 14:04:56, Vincent Diepeveen wrote:

>On March 17, 2003 at 19:49:30, leonid wrote:
>
>>On March 17, 2003 at 19:30:35, Dann Corbit wrote:
>>
>>>On March 17, 2003 at 19:17:38, leonid wrote:
>>>[snip]
>>>>It is truly sad that this kind of chip (Alpha) went to its end! Still, other
>>>>fact of migration to the new Itanium chip is very positive. This signify that
>>>>Intel's 64 chip had certain success and its quantity production is coming in
>>>>real. Then prices cuts should become tangible very soon.
>>>
>>>Intel is in no hurry to get the Itanic floating, and has said so themselves.
>>>
>>>Look for AMD to beat them out the door with cost effective volumes by a
>>>landslide.
>>>
>>>Microsoft also prefers the AMD approach, since all the old software will run
>>>without any modification.
>>
>>To be sincere I do know that AMD chip will be more accessible for me to buy but
>>Intel's chip more attractive to program. Intel's 128 registers do make me dream
>>without even mentioning its new architecture. Learning completely new Assembler
>>will be also interesting thing to do.
>
>$65000 for a 4 processor 1Ghz I2 box.
>
>Or if you buy 1 chip in a small 4 x 4 centimeter paper box it will be 'only
>$10000' or so.
>
>And that price won't get cheaper at all
>
>So forget itanium2 unless you have access to a supercomputer that has them.

Pricing information (cheapest I could find):
http://www.hp.com/workstations/products/itanium/zx6000/summary.html



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