From more@power.globalnews.com Tue Jun 14 20:59:31 1994 Received: from power.globalnews.com by zabriskie.EECS.Berkeley.EDU (4.1/1.42) id AA07939; Tue, 14 Jun 94 20:59:27 PDT Received: from localhost (daemon@localhost) by power.globalnews.com (8.6.4/8.6.4) id DAA19997; Wed, 15 Jun 1994 03:58:02 GMT Date: Wed, 15 Jun 1994 03:58:02 GMT From: more@power.globalnews.com Message-Id: <199406150358.DAA19997@power.globalnews.com> To: burd@zabriskie.EECS.Berkeley.EDU Subject: 1087 INTEL'S P6 WILL ALSO BE A TWO CHIP AFFAIR, SAYS PC WEEK Status: R INTEL'S P6 WILL ALSO BE A TWO CHIP AFFAIR, SAYS PC WEEK (June 10th 1994) In the last issue we reported the surprising news that the PowerPC 630 would be a multichip affair. Now PC Week in the US reports that Intel's forthcoming P6 processor will also consist of two chips. No one at Intel is formally commenting on the report, but the US magazine reports that the successor to the Pentium will have a separate 256k high-speed cache. The magazine expects the P6 to be clocked initially at 133MHz and to produce SPEC mark ratings of 200 or more. In addition it reports that the chip will initially be manufactured in 0.6 micron silicon before being moved to 0.4. This is new - at previous briefings Intel has always referred to the P6 as an 0.4 micron part. Other news that the paper has gleaned suggests that Intel will crank out 120MHz Pentiums in volume by the second quarter of 1995 and 133MHz chips by the third quarter. The company has already demonstrated a 150MHz part, however the paper believes that the commercial offering running at this speed will have to wait for Pentiums to move to 0.4 micron technology - due, it says, late next year. (C) PowerPC News - Free by mailing: add@power.globalnews.com