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Re: RISC microprocessor

 
Manish Chopra
New Member

RISC microprocessor

I have often wondered about the progress of RISC based microprocessors, and this is in context to HP-PARISC and IBM-POWER.

PARISC runs at a max. 1.2 Ghz speed, while the POWER 6 processor has gone beyond the 4 Ghz mark.

The question is, why the development of POWER based systems is continuing and POWER 7 is in pipeline. Why is it that the same could not be incorporated on PA-RISC and that it has become obsolete now, paving way for the Itanium processor.

If anyone could provide a link and/or explanation on this, it would be enlightening.
5 REPLIES 5
SoorajCleris
Honored Contributor

Re: RISC microprocessor

Hi Manish,

I also wonder the same!!..

I think it is because of considering the cost effectiveness. Currently HP is moving to Blade servers rather than the cell based one.

It seems there will be a Blade superdome. And the new Itanium processor which will be released is quad core ( the name is Tukwila).

It seems the next version of HP-UX 11i v4 will support only this architecture not PA-RISC

PA-RISC support will be stopped 2013 (wiki).

Regards,
Sooraj
"UNIX is basically a simple operating system, but you have to be a genius to understand the simplicity" - Dennis Ritchie
Dennis Handly
Acclaimed Contributor

Re: RISC microprocessor

>Why is it that the same could not be incorporated on PA-RISC?

It became too costly and HP decided to go with EPIC instead of RISC.
Hakki Aydin Ucar
Honored Contributor

Re: RISC microprocessor

Manish Chopra
New Member

Re: RISC microprocessor

Thanks for your replies and links, that are informative indeed.

But the primary concern is, why IBM has pushed a RISC processor(POWER chip) to beyond 4 Ghz speed whereas HP has'nt opted for doing the same for PA-RISC.

Yes, cost certainly is one factor, so does that mean that IBM can sustain the growth of POWER developments. IBM does'nt really seemed to have looked at "greener" processing !
marsh_1
Honored Contributor

Re: RISC microprocessor

hi,

it does all come down to cost, remember that ibm fabs it's own chips as well as having had a clear roadmap for the power chips for some time. digital/compaq made the same decision about alpha as hp did about pa-risc , looking ahead even though ev8 (dual core) and ev9 (multi core vector chip , power 7 rival) were down on paper, they could see diminishing returns trying to compete with intel/ibm et al.
much more cost effective to partner with intel and have them do the majority of the development and manufacture.

fwiw