enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Itanium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itanium

    Itanium failed to make significant inroads against IA-32 or RISC, and suffered further following the arrival of x86-64 systems which offered greater compatibility with older x86 applications. In a 2009 article on the history of the processor — "How the Itanium Killed the Computer Industry" — journalist John C. Dvorak reported "This ...

  3. IA-64 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IA-64

    IA-64 (Intel Itanium architecture) is the instruction set architecture (ISA) of the discontinued Itanium family of 64-bit Intel microprocessors. The basic ISA specification originated at Hewlett-Packard (HP), and was subsequently implemented by Intel in collaboration with HP. The first Itanium processor, codenamed Merced, was released in 2001.

  4. Sequent Computer Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequent_Computer_Systems

    Sequent Computer Systems was a computer company that designed and manufactured multiprocessing computer systems.They were among the pioneers in high-performance symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) open systems, innovating in both hardware (e.g., cache management and interrupt handling) and software (e.g., read-copy-update).

  5. List of Intel Itanium processors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intel_Itanium...

    Itanium 2 uses socket PAC611 with a 128 bit wide FSB.The 90 nm CPUs (9000 and 9100 series) bring dual-core chips and an updated microarchitecture adding multithreading and splitting the L2 cache into a 256 KB data cache and 1 MB instruction cache per core (the pre-9000 series L2 cache being a 256 KB common cache).

  6. Explicitly parallel instruction computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicitly_parallel...

    It was the basis for Intel and HP development of the Intel Itanium architecture, [3] and HP later asserted that "EPIC" was merely an old term for the Itanium architecture. [4] EPIC permits microprocessors to execute software instructions in parallel by using the compiler, rather than complex on-die circuitry, to control parallel instruction ...

  7. Tandem Computers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tandem_Computers

    Tandem's NonStop systems use a number of independent identical processors, redundant storage devices, and redundant controllers to provide automatic high-speed "failover" in the case of a hardware or software failure. To contain the scope of failures and of corrupted data, these multi-computer systems have no shared central components, not even ...

  8. List of mergers and acquisitions by Intel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mergers_and...

    Intel Corporation, an American multinational corporation and technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, is the world's largest semiconductor chip manufacturer by revenue.

  9. Talk:Windows NT 4.0 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Windows_NT_4.0

    But what version of MIPS it supports? 64-bit applications are supported by the Windows NT 6.0, because Alpha is a 64-bit processor? My workstation is based on PowerPC and it did really work with Windows NT 4.0, why you did not mention PowerPC architecture? You failed to answer so many questions, and make this article less compressible than before.