By
Stephen Shankland
Monday, July 10 2006 09:54 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39374005,00.htm
Intel will launch its "Montecito" version of Itanium, the first dual-core
version of the processor, on July 18, sources familiar with the event said.
The gargantuan chip, with 1.7 billion transistors, will be the new flagship
of Intel's sometime-stumbling effort to extend the influence it's achieved with Xeon and Pentium to the
high-end server market, where Sun Microsystems' Sparc and IBM's Power chips are
more widely used.
Intel had planned to launch Montecito in 2005. But in October, it delayed
its release, slowed its top speed by 200MHz and disabled a feature
code-named Foxton that would have let the chip run another 200MHz faster when it
was cool enough.
The highest-end Montecito is expected to run at a top speed of 1.6GHz, a
notch slower than the original 2GHz Intel had planned (including the Foxton
speed boost). But the Montecito chips, to be called the Itanium 2 9000 series,
will fit in better with Intel's current energy-conscious priority of performance
per watt. Montecito
will consume a maximum of 100 watts, compared with 130 watts for current
Itanium models. That means Itanium should increase performance by a factor of 2
and performance per watt by a factor of 2.5, Intel has said.
Intel declined to comment for this story. But Pat Gelsinger, a senior vice
president in Intel's Digital Enterprise Group, said in March that Intel
would start shipping Montecito in the second quarter of 2006. And in June,
at the launch of its "Woodcrest" version of Xeon, Intel said Montecito had begun
shipping to customers.
Intel won't be the only company at the San Francisco launch event on July 18.
Hewlett-Packard,
Intel's primary Itanium partner, also will participate, an HP representative
said, though no other details were offered. The computer maker plans to revamp
its "Arches" Superdome server with Montecito.
HP came up with the initial Itanium family idea and helped Intel design some
of the chips. But it's the only one of the four major server sellers to back the
chip: IBM
and Dell canceled their Itanium-based servers, and Sun only dabbled with
software support for the chip.
However, several smaller companies sell Itanium models, including Fujitsu,
Unisys, Hitachi, Silicon Graphics, NEC and Bull. Unisys also plans to attend the
event and take Montecito to its ES7000 servers when the chip becomes generally
available, a company representative said.
Montecito will mean Intel has a dual-core answer to Sun and IBM, which both
have sold dual-core chips for years. Intel and its main rival, Advanced Micro
Devices, also already have dual-core x86 chips.
Some Montecito models will be single-core chips, though. In addition, Intel
plans less-expensive Montecito models with smaller caches and lower power
consumption.
Even single cores have the ability to run multiple independent instruction
sequences, or threads, through a feature called Hyperthreading. And Montecito
also adds support for Intel's Virtualization Technology (VT), which makes it
easier to run multiple operating systems simultaneously on one computer.