On Fri, 26 Oct 2018, emanuel stiebler via cctalk wrote:
On 2018-10-25 14:48, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
While this was a failure on a spectacular level,
it was by no means the
only misstep by Intel. The i860 RISC CPU at one time was even being
endorsed by BillG as a possible personal computer basis.
the i860 found at least a little niche on graphics boards, so somehow
not a complete failure ;-)
I worked for a company that made supercomputer boards out of the i860 at
one point - at the time (very early 90's) they were blindingly fast,
40Mhz, 3 instructions per clock cycle which, since one was a floating
point multiply and add meant that it was pretty good - at the time.
However it was a royal PITA to code for although a 32-bit CPU, it would
read memory 64 bits at a time (actually 128 IIRC to satisfy the cache),
with half that 64-bit word being an instruction for the integer unit and
half for the floating point unit, so you effectively had to build a
floating point pipeline by hand coded instructions, so 8 (I think)
instructions to load the pipeline, then each subsequent instruction would
feed another value into the pipe, then another 8 at the end to empty it.
Great for big matrix operations, rubbish for a single add of 2 FP numbers.
The issue came when you wanted to take an interrupt - the overhead of
flushing the pipe, reloading it all for the next context, and so on really
bogged it down.
Not to mention writing assembly code in 2 columns...
There were quite a few systems built with about 30 boards in them, each
having 2 x i860's and a good few MB of RAM (64MB I think) built.
-Gordon