[MachineForth] Chuck's 25x and IBM's Blue Gene
- Subject: [MachineForth] Chuck's 25x and IBM's Blue Gene
- From: Jeff Fox <fox@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2001 17:18:20 -0700
- Organization: UltraTechnology
Waynesma wrote:
> Well even an x18
> on it's own would be a usefull chip (I can think of
> one low volumne group who would be over the moon if it
> was connected to their machine {: ) .
It does offer exceptionally low power and high
performance. The external 4ns memories are
easily obtainable and easy to connect. But to take
full advantage one might want to get a custom version
of the 1ns on-chip ROM w/ your app. done by Chuck.
I like the instruction set. ;-)
> Congradulations to Chuck, does this mean he's not
> working under iTV at the moment?
Yes. As he said at the very beginning of his
last presentation to FIG on OKAD II iTV had no
interest in a rewrite of his CAD software in
Forth or in any new chip designs by him. So
he got a new computer and began working on his
own on a project where some people had expressed
interest. He said they were nice people but
just not interested in his stuff.
> The x25 is excellent for it's application.
> Pity 32-bit Misc never came out, it would make an
> excellent front end controller for the beast.
Most likely a Pentium type machine will be used.
Chuck would most likely use ColorForth. Other people
plan to use some industrial strength software
like BSD.
> If you look on the news list of www.Tomshardware.com
Nice site. I liked the $1700 15" 3D LCD display and
the 128MB flash stamp, I was not impressed that Intel
only gets 1G out of 0.13u technology however. I wonder
what Chuck's designs would do if scaled from 1.8u
to 0.13u. Chuck Moore's law seems different than
Gordon Moore's law.
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