Intel, HP open Merced details to the public.
Published:
2 June 1999 y., Wednesday
Proclaiming the package to be the most significant change in architecture since the Intel 386, partners Intel Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. on Tuesday took the wraps off their 64-bit Merced processor. Developers and the public alike can now surf the vendors_ Web sites to review information about the next-generation processor, which is expected to reach preliminary silicon stages in the next 60 days and reach production workstations and servers during the second quarter of 2000. In a press conference, the companies revealed the general structure of the CPU. The processor will contain more than 256 internal general-purpose registers, 128 floating-point registers using 84-bit floating point numbers, parallel numeric processing, 64-bit memory addressing (over 1.84 thousand trillion addresses), MMX and SIMD extension support, and symmetrical multiple processor abilities. The vendors say Merced also will maintain full compatibility with the 32-bit Pentium and HP_s PA-RISC MAX2 instructions. Although not revealing the processor_s core clock speed, company officials estimate that Merced should perform more than six gigaflops, or six billion floating-point operations a second, where the
current Pentium III does two gigaflops.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
The Self-Service and Kiosk Association has published its 2009 Self-Service Consumer Survey, a comprehensive report that reveals what consumers like and dislike about self-service technology — and what they want more of.
more »
Private investors should hold up to 15 percent of their wealth in physical gold, according to a German asset-management company that plans to set up 500 "Gold-To-Go" ATMs in Germany, Switzerland and Austria sometime this year.
more »
ATM and debit card theft is expected to grow 10 percent to 14 percent this year, according to a survey of financial institutions that was released today.
more »
Built from potatoes, steered with carrots and powered by chocolate.
more »
Students at a Tokyo elementary school are waiting quietly for a "special lecturer" in science class. But when they see "Saya", a robot relief teacher, the kids are pleasantly surprised.
more »
This week - the New York Times announced a deal with e-commerce giant Amazon timed to the release of its latest Kindle e-book device.
more »
Wincor Nixdorf AG and NICE Banking, an independent ATM deployer in South Korea, have partnered to grow a network of ATMs at sites owned by the country's top communications provider, Korea Telecom.
more »
“The telecoms package has never been about anything to do with restrictions on the internet,” Malcolm Harbour told us ahead of Parliament's debate Tuesday on the telecoms package, which aims to reform the existing European electronic communications framework.
more »
On 20 April 2009 the Prague Congress Centre will host a ministerial conference Safer Internet for Children, which is organised by the Ministry of the Interior in cooperation with the European Commission.
more »
Payment card breaches in 2008 led to the most compromises and security breaches of record in the last four years, according to a new report from Verizon Business.
more »