Xref: utzoo comp.unix.questions:19740 comp.unix.aix:488 Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!mtndew!friedl From: friedl@mtndew.UUCP (Steve Friedl) Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions,comp.unix.aix Subject: Re: New product? Summary: IBM's new product Message-ID: <335@mtndew.UUCP> Date: 7 Feb 90 16:02:27 GMT References: <749@npiatl.UUCP> <1242@msa3b.UUCP> Followup-To: comp.unix.questions Distribution: comp Organization: Steve's Barnburner 386 Lines: 48 dkelly@npiatl.UUCP (Dwight Kelly) writes: >Just got an invitation to an IBM product announcement. Anyone know what >is being introduced? A friend of mine got to see an IBM internal presentation about their new workstation (the POWER series, some kind of stupid acryonym), and the Big Product Announcement is supposed to be in the next week or so. He and I really like to bash IBM, but my friend could not contain himself here -- he was totally impressed with the system. This is what I recall from the conversation. IBM did extensive studies of what kinds of instructions were needed by typical workstation, and they built a superscaler RISC to match it. Very high integer and floating point performance, four or five instructions can execute at one time. They use the MCA architecture, but they have some kind of mods that kick up the speed from 40mbyte/second up to over 200mbyte/second (and maybe even higher, I don't recall) depending on the model. As much as they hate following standards, they apparently did so by and large across the board. NFS, AFS, and TCP/IP come to mind. UNIX is supposed to be hybrid of Sys V and Berkeley, with a main focus on Posix compliance. 20000 pages of "great" documentation on CD ROM, online manuals, hundreds of hours of UNIX tutorials, etc. They already have in the ballpark of a hundred applications ported (including Frame, for instance) and have signed up many more to be delivered by the end of the year. They are setting up porting centers with these machines plus Suns and DECs and such, plus smart staff to help with the porting. Oh, they also admitted explicitly that they blew it totally on the RT and that if they do it again, nobody will take them seriously in this market. My friend says that they have not made the same mistake again. It looks like a really hot system. Steve -- Stephen J. Friedl, KA8CMY / Software Consultant / Tustin, CA / 3B2-kind-of-guy +1 714 544 6561 voice / friedl@vsi.com / {uunet,attmail}!mtndew!friedl "Winning the Balridge Quality Award is as easy as falling off a horse." - me