back to article Sun killing 'Rock' Sparc chip?

The word on the street today is that server maker Sun Microsystems - which is in the midst of being eaten by software giant Oracle for $5.6bn - has formally killed off the 16-core "Rock" UltraSparc-RK processor that has been in development for more than five years. The official response from Michelle Parkinson, the …

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  1. stc
    Unhappy

    end of an era

    that's a shame; rock sounded quite exciting and i understand it was getting fairly close to production. certainly not off in vaporware land like ultrasparc V was. i think this announcement marks nothing less than the end of sun microsystems as an independent hardware designer. soon enough sun will be nothing more than a name plate on a generic intel box, but i suppose it's been going that way for a while.

    i'll just keep on running my old ultrasparcs as long as i can get away with it.

    incidentally, the ultrasparc II wasn't really a paragon of a successful hardware launch. yes sun was flush with cash and riding high back in the .com boom but certainly the early ultrasparc II processors had some hardware issues e.g. with caches that really drove a lot of customers crazy back then. the story is not all roses but it is true that the ultrasparc II did eventually turn into a very solid performer albeit somewhat uncompetitive in terms of raw performance versus its contemporaries.

    really, in retrospect, i wouldnt say that sparc really ever had the edge in terms of pure performance. even the early sparc risc chips were not vastly more powerful than cisc contenders like the 68040 and early mips processors, and the ultrasparc was often bested in straight benchmarks by the alpha and power2. what always did it for me with sun is that they had a good all around package with excellent hardware reliability (imho; stop laughing!) and performance that while not eye popping was always acceptable.

  2. Magellan

    Talk about waiting until the last minute

    Next week Sun was to present a paper at the International Symposium on Computer Architecture:

    "Simultaneous Speculative Threading: A Novel Pipeline Architecture Implemented in Sun's ROCK Processor"

    See: http://isca09.cs.columbia.edu/papers.html

  3. Macka
    Black Helicopters

    Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    I can just imagine all the Sunshiners out there wincing with each passing sentence of that article and dreading the inevitable Bryant beasting that is to follow. Bring it on Matt. I'm in my comfy chair and the pop corn is warm, crisp and ready to eat.

  4. Louis Savain
    Thumb Up

    It's not too late

    Very interesting article. Sun's Rock failed because it was not innovative enough, in my opinion. Anybody who thinks that the multithreading CPU technologies of the last century are viable in the age of massive parallelism should lay off the dope, in my opinion. This is a lesson for all the big players in the business and it will not be the last big chip failure either. Get ready to witness Intel's Larrabee and AMD's Fusion projects come crashing down like so many Hindenburgs.

    As I wrote on Ashlee Vance's NYT blog (http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/15/sun-is-said-to-cancel-big-chip-project/?hp), after the industry has suffered enough (it’s all about money), it will suddenly dawn on everybody that it is time to force the baby boomers (the Turing Machine worshippers) to finally retire and boldly break away from 20th century’s failed computing models.

    Sun Microsystems blew it but it’s not too late. Oracle should let bygones be bygones and immediately fund another big chip project, one designed to truly rock the industry this time around and ruffle as many feathers as possible. That is, if they know what’s good for them.

    How to Solve the Parallel Programming Crisis:

    http://rebelscience.blogspot.com/2008/07/how-to-solve-parallel-programming.html

  5. Ian Michael Gumby
    Unhappy

    Unfortunately, it makes sense...

    Right now nothing software-wise can take advantage of the parallelism that Sun can bring to the table with Rock. It would mean a major investment in rewriting software for a single chip that maybe might have some gains on Intel and other architecture.

    Right concept, bad timing.

  6. Jimbo 7

    @Louis

    very interesting articles, thank you for the links

    I really think there is space for these processors in data warehousing environments run by oracle software, i wish you could add 4000 cheap nodes to Oracle RAC .... I wish

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Expect SPARC64 to be the next casualty

    Fujitsu's SPARC64 is going to quickly fade away also because they are simply just adding more low performance cores to a chip.

    The latest SPARC64 VII is a perfect example of a poor design with lower performance cores.

    Sun had the same problem with UltraSPARCIII to UltraSPARCIV.

    Sun/Fujitsu M-Class systems suffer from low performance cores which provide an inefficient software value platform.

    The SPARC64 VII quad core processors provide 26% less performance per core than the prior dual core versions.

    M5000 16 core system with dual core chips: Sun M-Value = 345,000 with M-Value/Core = 21,563

    M5000 16 core system with quad core chips: Sun M-Value = 255,000 with M-Value/Core = 15,938

    SPARC64 VII now provides less performance per core than Sun's discontinued UltraSPRAC IV+ systems

    E4900 1.95GHz 16 core system with dual core chips: Sun M-Value = 279,500 with M-Value/Core = 17,468

    M5000 2.4GHz 16 core system with quad core chips: Sun M-Value = 255,000 with M-Value/Core = 15,938 8% less performance than US-IV+ per core.

    Anyone running Oracle products should never buy a quad core SPARC64 chip.

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Unhappy

    Re: end of an era

    "i think this announcement marks nothing less than the end of sun microsystems as an independent hardware designer."

    You may be right here, however the Niagara line is very popular and they have a new chips scheduled pretty regularly through 2012. More chips that Intel has for Itanium, that's for sure. Niagara has always been on time as well. Much better history than Power or Itanium. My biggest concern is for Sun on the high-end. The M-Series is great, but I would like to see a high-end solution from Sun, not Fujitsu. Maybe Oracle will buy Fujitsu's SPARC group...

  9. Charles Manning

    Killed != dead

    I doubt very much that Sun would have shredded all the documentation and reformatted all the servers holding the data for Rock.

    The IP up to this stage still exists and can be re-awakened if it makes business sense to do so.

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Many Thanks

    Thanks to Marc Tremblay, Jeff Thomas, Aharon Ostrer, Shailender Chaudhry strong leadership of Rock.

    Marc Tremblay just chalked up one more success after MAJC.

    Congrats to MSFT for the great catch!

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Re: Unfortunately, it makes sense...

    "...Right concept, bad timing..."

    The right concept is a concept that has the proof, at least in the magnitude (30 times) as it was promised in 2002.

    The timing is really bad, it's too late.

  12. Anonymous Coward
    Pirate

    Regatta On a Chip Killer

    What a funny name. It's like a movie studio funding a project called "box office flop". A non-functioning chip is "rock"! Doh!

  13. Antonio Cavallo
    Stop

    On time and on budget

    That was the reason for failure: how could anybody think ANY project could survive to such a huge delay without consequences?

    Let's face the fact no one would wait a year for a brand new architecture to come to the market: eventually one will go with what is already present.

  14. This post has been deleted by its author

  15. SynnerCal
    Unhappy

    Like they said, and end of an era

    If Rock is killed then, like the article says, I also think that we'll see one or two more spins of the current chipsets, and then folks will be moved to something from Intel.

    Which makes the Unix server market interesting - in one corner you have Intel, backed by HP and soon (?) Sun, and in the other IBM. Heck, HP support Solaris on their excellent ProLiant boxes (unlike the HP/sUX trash) so maybe they'll work even closer together. On the other side, doesn't this more or less gift the high end (32-way and above) market to Big Blue for Power6/6+/7?

    @Macka: "Bring it on Matt" - hey, give him time to get in and get his orders from Mark Hurd! ;)

  16. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    Patience, grasshopper. You may have to put the popcorn on hold as it will take the Sunshiners a while to get over their shock, they're probably still in denial right now. But that popping sound isn't your Rice Crispies, it's Sunshiners' heads exploding.

    Good morning, Sunshiners. And how are you all this morning? Please try and concentrate, now - the Grand Nova Master Ashlee Vance has said The Rock is dead. Now, which Sunshiner wants to put a starter in by claiming that Ash is just an hp salesman in disguise, trolling his own blog, and nothing but a Sun hater? Form an orderly queue - no pushing at the back! Wait your turn, Novatose.

    Seriously, though, was there anyone out there that didn't realise Sun had lost the plot by 2001? They've been on the backfoot and going backwards ever since, and Rock was largely doomed by Sun's own actions before it even hit the drawing board. If Rock had arrived in 2003, when Sun still had some gravitas with the software houses, then it might have stood a fighting chance. Amusingly, it was the acceptance of Linux by those big software houses that put the first nail in Sun's coffin, and one of the most telling was Oracle's drive to make Linux a key OS. Larry is just getting Ponytail to finish what he started.

    /Smug? Me? Never!

  17. WinHatter
    IT Angle

    Makes sense

    Oracle never intended to carry on the Sparc line ... there is nothing Oracle cannot achieve on a, intel or amd.

    Plus it's better if Sun does the slaughtering rather than Oracle. If it were Oracle to do it, they may have some issues with the SEC & other anti-trust thingies.

  18. Destroy All Monsters Silver badge
    Flame

    @Louis Savain

    "time to force the baby boomers (the Turing Machine worshippers) to finally retire and boldly break away from 20th century’s failed computing models."

    In shorthand Internetese: "Learn2TheoreticalComputerScience". Nobody worships the TM and the TM is not implemented _anywhere_ (except maybe in Lego, as seen on Youtube).

    Sadly, the referenced blogpost does not exactly propose a valid solution; 12-year olds have such ideas between supper and bedtime all the time.

    As for Rock; well, these are sad times when soon-bought companies can say "NO" to promising chip projects. I was really looking forward to a transactional memory implementation. But what will Oracle do with all the research & development and, I suppose, the attendant patents? Will they go to Intel or to IBM?

  19. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    We were the first group to vomit in the bar

    Rock is dead. Long live Rock!

  20. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    For Sale Rock T-shirt

    For sale 1 'Solaris Rocks' T-shirt.

    Orange in colour worn once (whilst decorating) a few paint marks otherwise in good condition.

    Given to me as a freebie (remember those days when Sun gave out freebie's)

    Paris - because she would look good wearing one.

  21. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    Not all doom & gloom

    Sun customers need to know that Sun has other CPU designs in its processor roadmap beyond tha Rock that are still actively being developed. Skipping Rock is not such a big deal, the successors are way cooler (in features, dunno about die temp), as you would expect...

    Dont tune out yet, Sun is still in the scene...

  22. No Use for A Name

    sun just scheduled rock demos in hamburg

    this is weird - sun just scheduled a presentation of rock in hamburg, supposedly live hardware will be demoed:

    http://www.c0t0d0s0.org/archives/5643-preHHOSUG-ROCK-NDA-Praesentation.html

    also there is the presentation at isca next week:

    "Simultaneous Speculative Threading: A Novel Pipeline Architecture Implemented in Sun's ROCK Processor"

    See: http://isca09.cs.columbia.edu/papers.html

    I doubt that the last word is spoken on this.

  23. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: sun just scheduled rock demos in hamburg

    This is just the news not having yet been internally announced to all and Sundry, and what's left of the Sun marketing team getting on with what they have been told to do. When they canned UltraSPARC V, we had a Sun Veep (not naming names) come round only five days before the announcement to tell us US V was taped out, the silicon was ready, etc, etc.

  24. Anonymous Coward
    Dead Vulture

    Dropped like a rock

    Bad bad execution. Horrible, horrible leadership. EVPs, VPs, Directors, ... Sure fire way to sink any project.

  25. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    re: On time and on budget

    Tukwila anybody? Later than ROCK and twice as expensive to produce.

  26. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    re: Dropped like a rock

    Can't agree anymore. Good riddance marc trembly.

  27. David Halko
    Unhappy

    Impossible to avoid an Oracle takeover...

    Timothy Prickett Morgan writes, "Sun has two more weeks before its fiscal year ends and another four weeks before Sun shareholders vote on the Oracle takeover"

    It sounds like management in Sun are making it impossible for the shareholders to vote against the Oracle acquisition.

    Remove one of the legs of the stool, which was planned to take their midrange hardware business into profitability, there is no plan except acquisition.

  28. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Re: RE: sun just scheduled rock demos in hamburg

    Good on ya' Matty. You kept your comment down to a relatively small paragraph. Though, you could have cut out half of it and still got your point across, but I think this is progress. Of course, your other frothing rant was still a bit long. You're getting there little Matty. Remember, short is just frothing, while long is a frothing rant. Keep trying...

  29. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: re: On time and on budget

    "Tukwila anybody? Later than ROCK and twice as expensive to produce." <Yaaaaaaaawwn> Look, I know you Sunshiners are gonna try and live out the denial by squealing on about Tukwila, but the truth is Rock is dead - you can't get any later! And as for the idea of Tukwila being twice as expensive to produce, how do you know? Do you have production costs for either? Well, actually do you have cost projections for production costs for Tukwila, seeing as it's not in production yet, and as the only costs now for Rock are disposing of all remainder of the Rock team.

    Instead of wasting your time on more Sunshining, I suggest you get on over to https://www.redhat.com/training/ and start anew.

    /SP&L

  30. Anonymous Coward
    Linux

    demo's ?

    they had a box last year. but only single chip.

    couldnt make it run properly with two. or more.

    come the next tape-out, the credit crunch, more fumbling.

    then the guys start talking down a little the to be expected performance compared to competitors.......

    very curious to see what money-machine oracle is going to think about more spending on sparc while there's little hope for solid profit.....

    btw, 3rd march they put solaris INTEL on the "obsolete platform" list.

    No oracle 11g coming for that, is what it says.

    Will be funny to see the sudden change of mind, say next month... ;-)

    or ??

    ac

  31. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    re: Drooling Matty

    "And as for the idea of Tukwila being twice as expensive to produce, how do you know?"

    Because it is based on the most complex chip design of all time, EPIC. Even Intel's architects comment on it (looking for the article... I'll find it as soon as I select Post). Nothing new in the Itanium camp for how long? All they do is add more cores and more cache, and slowly at that. Nothing else. Niagara and SPARC64 seem to have regular updates, and on time, unlike Power and Itanium. RISC is simple and easy to update while EPIC is complex and expensive to design. Complexity translates directly to cost. Ask anyone in the microelectronics field Matty. You seem to have a lot of friends at HP... wait, that's right HP does not have any chip designers.

  32. Mauro M.
    Paris Hilton

    @AC re: Drooling Matty

    "Nothing else. Niagara and SPARC64 seem to have regular updates, and on time, unlike Power and Itanium."

    Regular updates unlike POWER? Gimme a break...

    POWER5, 5+, 6, 6+ what was that about? IBM released POWER4 dual core 1.1 and 1.3 GHz back in 2001 and current line is 5.0 GHz on POWER6 is that not regular update for you? You serious???

    ROCK (Regatta on a chip killer) was targeted at POWER4 Regatta machines that was like 8 years ago... come on... wake up dude...

    And regarding Itanium yes, they upgraded from 1.1 to 1.66 GHz in the last few years, and with Tukwila delayed again, they don't have regular updates lately

    Watch the industry more carefully before posting...

    Cheers!

    Paris: 'cause she also does like the POWER

  33. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: re: Drooling Matty

    "....All they do is add more cores and more cache, and slowly at that. Nothing else....." Lol, so you missed all that stuff about DDR3 and QPI then? And so funny that a design that you say has additions so slowly and so lightly has been trouncing any SPARC design for years!

    "....Complexity translates directly to cost....." Ah, so what you're really saying is you haven't got a clue how much Tukwila will cost, you're just swinging wildly in your grief. There, there, go wipe your eyes and blow your nose and try not to be such a whiner in future.

  34. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Re: RE: re: Drooling Matty

    "... stuff like DDR3 and QPI..."

    Ha ha ha!!! Nice Matt. You're right, those are great advances... LOL. and when will they be released? You don't know, do you? There have been regular Niagara and SPARC64 at least every 6 months. When was the last Itanium update????

    Montecito came out in 2007 (2 years late) and just added dual cores... Montvale came out in 2007 and only added more cache. Two years and still no new chip! Where's Tukwila? Intel has been promising Tukwila since 2003, of course they called it Tanglewood then. Intel first said 2007, then they said 2008, then 2009, and now 2010!!!

    Don't believe me...

    http://www.eweek.com/c/a/IT-Infrastructure/Intel-Exec-Runs-Down-New-Itanium-Roadmap/

    http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1035411/intels-itanium-tukwila-duels-with-amds--toledo

    http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9584_22-145245.html?tag=nl

    http://www.itworld.com/tukwila-itanium-servers-coming-080519

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/05/intel_delays_tukwila/

    http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2242772/intel-delays-chips

    Heck, with Intel's 3 year old chips both Sun and IBM can beat the snot out of Itanium.

    Sure there are a couple of cherry picked benchmarks that HP does well on, but when

    you actually run your application on the systems you see a massive performance advantage

    for both IBM and Sun. Itanium is behind and if they don't start releasing chips more often than

    every couple of years, then they will fall further behind. No frequency advances, no core advances, no thread advances, and their bus is sorely behind... QPI better be as good as they say, 'cuz they're hurting if not.

    I was looking forward to ROCK, but SPARC64 screams at the high-end and Niagara is quickly moving up the performance/scalability ramp. You can actually see the advances of Niagara on a regular basis, while Itanium is a snail in comparison. Is Intel actually investing in Itanium anymore?

  35. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Re: @AC re: Drooling Matty

    I agree. Power is updated much more often that Itanium, but Power7 is very late. They promised Power7, but give us Power6+, but where is it? Oh yeah, it came out, but no once cared.

    "Watch the industry more carefully before posting..."

    I know that you love your Power, but you are blinded by your love. Power6 was promised in 2006, and then moved to 2007. Power7 was promised in 2008, but then Power7 was removed from their roadmap and Power6+ showed up. Then Power7 was there, but no date (To Come). Then Power6 showed up in 2007(more than a year late). Power7 was then pushed out to 2010 (2 years late). Of course Power6 was only put on some low end systems and not pushed to the high end until 2008, more than 2 years later than promised. Power7 was removed from roadmaps again and Power6+ was promised instead.

    http://www.itjungle.com/tfh/tfh042709-story01.html

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/04/28/ibm_power6_plus_servers/

    Forgive me if I can't keep up with IBM's Roadmaps. Apparently, not even IBM can.

    Of course, IBM was smart to keep their core count down and their megahertz up considering the licensing issue, but they've apparently hit the wall with this strategy. Where is their new chip?

    Also, though better than HP/UX, AIX is no where near what Solaris is, let alone Linux. No wonder people want to run Linux on Power.

  36. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    About IBM Power roadmap

    I agree. IBM had some delays on Power roadmap.

    However, I was searching for detailed roadmap information in El Reg and went through this:

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/08/07/ibms_power5_to_hit_3ghz/

    A 2003 IBM roadmap, and it seems IBM did a great job on their processor launches so far.

    Never saw IBM cancelling a processor project like the ones at Sun and HP (Compaq).

    In terms of roadmap, I believe IBM is the only player that can really say when and what to be released.

    Cheers!

  37. Ian Michael Gumby

    @Bazza... not quite...

    The same problem exists in Sparc VII+ chips in their m900 series (or is it m9000?)....

    If you follow comp.databases.informix, there was an issue concerning how to tune the database engine in the environment because while you have 64 cores, there are two threads to a core.

    The bottom line was that Informix (IBM's IDS engine) is probably the best engine to take advantage of the virtual cores, yet it can't. If you go to rock you have the same problem.

    So your current off the shelf packages like Oracle, IDS, DB2, Sybase, etc ... can't take advantage of the extreme parallelism that Rock can offer.

    Yes you are correct that you can have special applications developed that would take advantage, yet how many customers are there that have the budget and the staff to write these apps? (Not enough to make the chip viable)

    Many articles, including those in El Reg have talked about having to upgrade the software in the OS and in applications to take advantage of parallelism offered not only by Sun, but also Intel's new chips. CRN (Computer Reseller News) had an article that talked about creating 15+ virtual microsoft servers on a 2 socket 8 core xeon 5500 box. Think about that. Instead of being able to have the software scale up, you have to instead scale down the box into multiple virtual servers to get the most out of the hardware.

    Take to the example of PC users desktops where they use CPU intensive software like photoshop. Even here the lack of parallelism shows that the hardware advances go under utilized.

    And that was the point. Sun's architecture is brilliant, but unfortunately no one has written applications that have mass appeal to take advantage of it....

    Again, good idea, bad timing.

  38. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    A Rock and a Hard Place

    Shame on all of you who are talking about information that is disclosed under NDA/CDA. These are legally binding on employees and customers. Any of you old enough to remember

    "Loose lips sink chips"?

    I wouldn't trust you with my mother's maiden name, and yes, unlike you loose lipped idiots, I know my mother.

  39. Jesper Frimann

    AC on POWER roadmaps.

    You should really try to get your so called facts from other sites than BMSEER.

    POWER6+ was 'promised' for 2008, and you know what they just made it. If you check out the power 560, you will see that it packs a power6+ processor.

    Now we can then agree that power6+ is a bit of a disappointment. But hey it's not like SUN or HP have anything that can match it.

    Well there is Niagara, but hey it needs 64 slow moving threads to do it, which is a big enough problem in it's own right.

    // Jesper

  40. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: Re: RE: re: Drooling Matty

    "Ha ha ha!!! Nice Matt. You're right, those are great advances... LOL. and when will they be released? ...." They have been released already in Nehalem. One of Intel's big advantages has been the ability to bring advances from the Itanium line into Xeon and mass-produce them, which makes the cost of introdcuing them in Itanium much lower. When Tukizilla hits those Sun refugee accounts next year it will come with proven QPI and DDR3 tech, and run current Itanium binaries - no risk! Even if Sun had managed to get Rock out the door, it would have been "bleeding-edge" and unproven, with no prior successful implementations of scout threads or transactional memory to bolster confidences, and also with precious few applications even able to take advantage of the design even with a recompile.

    ".....QPI better be as good as they say, 'cuz they're hurting if not....." Aaaaaaaaannnnnd once again, time to remind you which combo is king in the enterprise high end, the most demanding but most margin-rich arena - yes, hp-ux on Integrity! In fact, Integrity's sales figures have been consistently upward for years. And the reason is because the whole package is better - better performance, better stability, better features, better management, better compatibility, better range, better integration with other hp products like storage, and better support and services. Oh, and also because us customers don't think hp is about to tank in the same way Sun already has.

    But to get back to Rock, there is still hope for you Sunshiners. After all, this is still unconfirmed by Sun. Not that it makes much difference - customers will believe the rumours because it is what they expect, which does make it strange that Ponytail hasn't immediately been on the phone to deny it....

  41. Matt the Shaolin Munkee!

    RE: Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    "Pateince, grasshopper!!" Jeez Matt, thats an insight and a half into your psyche though I suppose it's expected you'd turn up and gloat given the ribbings you've taken. I've no problem saying I'm a bit gutted that Rock is speculated as dead but lets be clear, none of us know whats planned until it comes from Oracle directly these days.

    I'm more gutted it give you space to be smug! :-)

    If they actually have dropped it I'm guessing they'll morph the technology into the T2 / KT lines and produce a hybrid without all the faffing around in transactional memory. I'd be reasonably certain a chunk of the pre-fetch/scout alogorythyms they've mentioned could get carried across and so forth. Perhaps Sun engineering bit off more than can be chewed in current development costs with transactional memory stuff, at least the T2 lines use relatively standard RAM.

    So IF it's dead here's hoping Oracle bolts in as much of the good stuff that they can do with a bucket load of DDR 3 and bang out the chips with a cheaper footprint.

    You do set yourself up for some falls though Matt so remember the pebble will be snatched if Itanic sinks or this is just rumour, I'd place money that people will spoon feed you humble pie!

  42. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: RE: Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    "....Jeez Matt, thats an insight and a half into your psyche...." Yes, it's called humour, I understand that Sunshiners just don't get it seeing as how they were the only poeple not laughing when UltraSPARC IV was announced. Trying to read anything else into it is just desperation on your part to find anything to divert from the topic of the article. The rest of your post is just wishful thinking.

    In fact, the rather half-hearted response and the complete lack of ranting from the usually rabid Sunshiners indicates you guys have actually been secretly expecting this just as much as the rest of us, despite your continual denials.

  43. Matt the Shaolin Munkee!
    Boffin

    RE: RE: Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    Matt, in your infinite wisdom would you also remind us that while HP Market droids were laughing at Sun's move from Sparc-iii to Sparc-iV (2004) it meant a performance bump Itanium fans were dreaming of? The move from Sparc-iV to Sparc iV+ (2005) was another good bump as well (bump = leap in Itanium terms)

    Sparc-iV to iV+ was a modest frequency increase (10% on first Sparc-iV+) but a fairly big engineering change (pipelining, cache, CPU features) and meant something like a 40% perf increase with power down to 90w/socket. Again, something dreamt of by Itanium fan's like yourself back then!

    I'm sure the HP sales grunts were generating hollow laughs at figures like those especially when the Itanium was something like 1.6ghz, single core (or dual core if you count two seperate CPU's bolted on one socket at 260watts/socket!!!) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itanium#Processors

    I think back then Sunnies weren't laughing as they were shaking their heads at Itanic slowly melting the icecaps......

    Anyway, shall we both grow up a bit & just wait and see if this is a game to force a statement from Oracle? Or shall we chew & speculate more on whether there is any meat on this bone?

  44. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Re: RE: Re: RE: re: Drooling Matty

    Funnnnnyyy!

    From MB: "They have been released already in Nehalem."

    Regarding QPI and DDR3 in Itanium not being out yet as Itanium is (again) late.

    Also, from MB: "One of Intel's big advantages has been the ability to bring advances from the Itanium line into Xeon..."

    So which way is it? The GREAT advances in Itanium go down to Xeon or the more advanced Xeon advances going into Itanium. Have you gotten it yet Matt? Intel is not making money from Itanium due to extremely low volumes. Volume matters Matt. Even Sun sells twice as many SPARC CPU's as Intel sells Itanium. Intel can't make money at this rate. Intel is slowly moving Xeon features into Itainum so that they can kill Itanium all together. Will HP give Intel another 10Billion to keep Itanium afloat? I doubt it.

    Solaris on Xeon anyone? I know HP loves it (obviously EDS does).

  45. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: RE: RE: Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    Those of us that worked with UltraSPANKed will remember that US2 and US3 performances were generally so dire that even the "bump" of the US4 release still left Sun SPARC trailing existing Power, PA-RISC and Itanium. Just 'cos you managed to get SPARC of it's belly and crawling on it's knees didn't mean it was anywhere close enough to catch the competition. It was all the more amusing that Fujitsu's own SPARC64, developed on less money than UltraSPANKed 4, managed to be typically 20% faster for less money (I know 'cos I brought in FSC kit to replace some of our Sun Slowaris servers). You may want to recall that US4 did nothing to halt the dive in Sun sales and the continued lack of profits in the post-dotbomb period, whilst hp and IBM soldiered on with profitable businesses.

    But, as you say, let's see if this gets a statement from Sun (Oracle can't comment as they don't own the bizz yet). We can also wait and see if Oracle deny the reports that they are still trying to sell on the unwanted Sun hardare bizz.....

  46. Matt Bryant.
    Unhappy

    HP and Intel are killing us all

    Now I'm hearing that Intel will not RELEASE Tukzilla until Q1 2010. HP will then only get out new systems 2-5 months later!!! That's no Tukzilla kit until late 2010!!! HELP!!!

  47. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Re: RE: RE: RE: Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    Ha Ha... MB has to go back 6 years to find a point when Sun's chips were slower than Itanium... and that wasn't for very long. Nice. Itanium has been behind since the beginning and is not getting any better. That's why HP is the only user. Even without ROCK, Niagara and SPARC64 destroy Itanium now, and the roadmap for Niagara and SPARC64 leaves Itanium in the dust. Faster bus, higher speed, more cores, more threads, more RAM. These are facts, not just opinions, such as your claim of better support and maintenance tools. Enough with the marketing speak Matt. We all know that you work for a HP Partner, you don't have to keep reminding us.

  48. Anonymous Coward
    FAIL

    re: MB

    "...Fujitsu's own SPARC64, developed on less money than UltraSPANKed 4..."

    Oh, and you know this because - or are you just blowing Itaniums out your butt?

  49. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Happy

    RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: re: Drooling Matty

    ".....Regarding QPI and DDR3 in Itanium not being out yet as Itanium is (again) late...." You have obviously forgotten that the article is about Rock being so late it has been cancelled. Tukzilla hasn't been cancelled. I'd try spelling it out for you but I might have to use words with more than one constinant, which seem to fox any chance of you actually grasping the facts.

    "....So which way is it?...." QPI was developed as CSI in the Itanium stream and then also moved to the Xeon stream. DDR3 was originally designed into the Xeon stream, then added to the Itanium stream. Those of us with a clue have read and understood that from the Reg articles on Tukzilla and Nehalem. I assume you were waiting for the crayon edition with all the big words taken out?

    "....Intel is not making money from Itanium due to extremely low volumes...." Wrong again. Intel reports it is making a profit on Itanium, and seeing as it is ramping up whilst all SPARC are ramping down, it looks like Itanium will go on making more money than SPARC. Well, more money than SPARC64 as it now looks doubtful any other server SPARC will exist in a year.

    "....Even Sun sells twice as many SPARC CPU's ...." Care to post some facts to back up that claim? Even including the Mickey Mouse Niagara CPU and all of the Fujitsu sales it would not reach that "twice" claim. What you are also forgetting is that hp sell the ProLiant range against Niagara with great success, so what you should be looking at is all server sales. But you won't because it really pains you lot to have to admit hp is the number one server vendor. You also forget that hp makes more margin per server than Sun according to IDC, especially in the margin rich enterprise high end where Sun has virtually ceased to exist. In fact, hp makes more money in a quarter on printers and ink than Sun make losses from their whole server bizz in a year. The fact is, were it otherwise, it would be hp being bought up for chump change rather than Sun.

    "....Intel is slowly moving Xeon features into Itainum so that they can kill Itanium all together....." Yeah, I heard that bit of Sun FUD too. I think it was before the UltraSPANKed V got canned. Nice to see you Sunshiners are staying up to date - not! Not much hope for an updated FUDset for the Sunshiners now that the Sun has set. Maybe soon they'll realise Intel (and hp) use Itanium and Xeon as a two-prong strategy to attack the RISC market - Xeon from below and Itanium from above. The success of the strategy can be gauged by a simple truth you'd no doubt like to ignore - the Sun server bizz has gone down the tubes with the cancellation of Rock being the final surrender flag. Even Sun's desperately late and failed attempts to jump on the x64 bandwagon haven't saved them due to the vanity of their SPARC pretensions. Had Sun got serious with Slowaris x86 as a real server offering back in 2000 then the story might be different, they might have held off Linux and Windows, but the SPARC-Slowaris crowd couldn't stand that, and they ran the company into the ground in their stupidity.

    So let's try and keep it simple. I'll give you four simple questions, you just think long and hard about the answers and then see how silly you feel given your earlier posts:

    1) Which company, Sun or hp, has made a profit in the last six years?

    2) Which company has the larger range of products, Sun or hp?

    3) Which company went from being a $200bn company in 2000 to having a market cap of less than $4bn this year, Sun or hp?

    4) Which company has just been bought by a software company, Sun or hp?

    /SP&L

  50. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    FAIL

    RE: HP and Intel are killing us all

    I see the Sunshiners are so desperate to avoid discussing the demise of Rock they've even wheeled out the fake Matt Bryant login. Maybe they hope they can wish away their pink slips simply by keeping their heads in the sand.

  51. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    FAIL

    RE: Re: RE: RE: RE: Sorry Sunshiners Sparc Shocker!

    "....MB has to go back 6 years to find a point when Sun's chips were slower than Itanium...." As is proven by their relative market positions (and the fact the Sun hardware bizz is currently being lined up for a rodgering by the Oracle banecounters), Itanium has been outperforming Sun kit for years. Apart from the fun we had showing this with Novatose's SAP posts, my own experience of Sun SPARC vs IBM Power vs hp Itanium shootouts for our projects is that Sun hasn't won a single one. The domination of hp-ux on Integrity in he enterprise high end just goes to prove the point. More to the point, we've been replacing old SPARC with Xeon becasue x64 has been outperforming low-end and mid-range SPARC for years too.

    But, once again, another AC Sunshiner desperate to avoid the facts of the article - Rock is dead, Sun have studiously avoided denying it, and even if they did their customer base has already started porting off SPARC Slowaris onto platforms like hp-ux and Linux on hp servers (led by EDS, who are taking their own Slowaris skills and hp's excellent porting programs to help all those Slowaris orphans get to a better place).

    As has been obvious for the last three years or so, Itanium has only needed to compete with Power as Sun were happilly killing SPARC through their own stupidity. Enjoy!

    /SP&L whilst I still can, until Larry kills the rest of Sun.

  52. Anonymous Coward
    Pint

    re: RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: re: Drooling Matty

    ""....Even Sun sells twice as many SPARC CPU's ...." Care to post some facts to back up that claim? ""

    If you can't read IDC and Gartner reports, then you are beyond reason. Yes, HP is relatively even with Sun on Unix server revenue, but Sun sells twice as many systems and twice as many CPU's. It's simple math really. Now, the profit thing, I'll admit is a little iffy. Of course, Sun doesn't have printers and EDS to prop up their weaker businesses (read Itanium).

    "Intel reports it is making a profit on Itanium," Care to back up that claim. Intel keeps the numbers very secretive on Itanium numbers (especially $'s)... Try again, no ones buying your BS.

    "...use words with more than one constinant..." Don't you dare put constinants in your overly verbose rants, whatever constinants are... or did you mean Constanta? I've always wanted to visit. I love Romanian Cabbage Balls.

    "...my own experience of Sun SPARC vs IBM Power vs hp Itanium shootouts for our projects..." When all else fails, pull out fake experiences from your nether regions. I could share some experiences of the exact opposite nature, but they would be just as meaningless.

    "Itanium has been outperforming Sun kit for years." Your numbers are lacking, and benchmarks have been provided to you constantly... You just choose to ignore them. Itanium is a joke and has not had a major, or minor for that matter, update in several years. Superdome is an aging platform that won't be replaced for a year... Now that HP has killed another great company (Compaq), and forced it's customers to succumb to their trash hardware (Itanium), the Itanium numbers will go back down to where they were - non-existent. When you put the legacy sales numbers at HP in line with the Itanium sales numbers you see an exact but opposite relation. As the legacy sales go down, the Itanium sales go up at exactly the same rate. Quite astonishing really.

    As far as what Oracle does with the Sun HW business, Larry has stated that he will invest in SPARC. I don't know what else he can say than that. Oracles government filings state that they will keep and expand Sun HW. Now, I'm not so daft that I don't think they may change their mind, but any comment to the contrary is just FUD and not welcome in an adult conversation.

    Now, you've made me type more than I intended and I have a pint waiting for me, so I will ignore some of your other more repetitive comments and move on. Thank you.

  53. Anonymous Coward
    Heart

    Matt's a bit defensive now isn't he?

    It must be that he is hurting with his "management team" on the decision to go with the dead end product line like Itanium. The past has been painful, and it doesn't look like the future will be much better. Don't be defensive Matt... You could always find an Oracle partner to work for instead of the HP partner that you work for now... or go into the printer business.

  54. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Troll

    RE: Matt's a bit defensive now isn't he?

    Very telling that the Sunshiners are more interested in posting abuse at a "critic" of their beloved Sun rather than discussing the topic of the article. But is anybody surprised? So let's look at their latest drooling and try and separate some intelligence from the whimpering.

    "It must be that he is hurting with his "management team" on the decision to go with the dead end product line like Itanium...." Consider that suggestion for a moment - Rock is dead, Itanium is not, so surely I'd be more in trouble if I'd recommended buying more SPARC to tide us over until Rock arrived, as Sun suggested and no doubt as you believed? Especially given that with the Oracle purchase, there is a big cloud of doubt over ALL the current and future SPARC lines which can't be resolved until late-July at the earliest. Anyone with half a clue and not blinded by the Sunshine would probably come to the conclusion the Sunshine option would make me a lot more unpopular with the board than our current use of Itanium or Power. And, seeing as we chose a backup platform option for all major UNIX projects, we wouldn't be in too much trouble if Itanium did die, unlike you Sunsiners that happilly promote SPARC Slowaris and nothing else. Your logic is poor at best, or just childishly petulant.

    "....The past has been painful, and it doesn't look like the future will be much better....." Why has it been painful? Not sure what you're getting at here unless this is some insinuation that hp or IBM have somehow reneged on a platform promise like Sun did when they cancellled UltraSPANKed V and have now with cancelling Rock. But then I don't really expect any form of factual argument from Sunshiners.

    "....You could always find an Oracle partner to work for instead of the HP partner that you work for now...." And more of the obsession with making out I work for an hp partner. Very sad. Do you guys really believe that only an hp employee or partner could possibly criticise Sun? Are you that obtuse? Haven't you noticed the big decline in Slowaris sales, even steeper than the general decline in UNIX? Are you really trying to tell me you have never heard a single complaint from a Sun customer? Mind you, it would be hard for you to hear anything with your head so deep in the sand. I suppose it must comfort you to pretend I am an hp employee or work for an hp reseller as that would be so much easier than having to face up to reality. I suggest you get your head out of the sand soon as your continued employment will probably involve learning some new skills with an OS and platform with a future, which means something not from Sun. As a hint, have you seen that Reg article on how RedHat is making a trend-bucking profit in the downturn?

    /SP&L, very smugly.

  55. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Rocks don't float - loose lips not needed

    You don't need confidential information to be able to conclude that Rock had hit the proverbial iceberg. Lots of ((soon-to-be-)ex-)Sunnies might've vented some steam on this occasion but all given just followed the publicly available facts:

    Rock's existance has been made public as far back as 2003/2004 when it was first mentioned in interviews with David Yen (on computerworld) and Marc Tremblay (on aceshardware) - see e.g. the links on Rock given in various updated during the history or Rock's wikipedia entry.

    Yet, it took five years to "make" it to a public milestone - that is:

    The Solaris support for "Supernova" went into OpenSolaris, again, publicly visible, September last year (http://opensolaris.org/os/community/on/flag-days/pages/2008092603/).

    From that alone one could've deduced it's not been going smoothly - compared to Sun's competition, only Itanium has had delays anywhere close to that.

    But then there'd been something else quite scary last year in summer:

    David Yen left Sun, and Sun suddenly, amidst its credit crunch turmoil and announcement of 20% job cuts, opened job offers for a whole team of senior CPU designers / hardware engineers, including a senior chip design team director, several principal (director-level) architects, and so on. About 20 positions in total, all visible on Sun's corporate employment pages for everyone to see who bothered to look.

    Several of these remained open on Sun's employment pages all the way till March/April when the takeover negotiations slashed all that there was. And of course then finally Marc Tremblay went for greener shores as well.

    Why was Sun attempting at scrambling a CPU design/verification team together when they're oh so close to releasing the dud ? The writing that something's been sorely amiss there was on the public wall for about nine months, if you'd bothered to look for it.

    And no, that doesn't tell how long it might've been on the wall within Sun. But then, I've yet got to see a comment from an (ex-)Sunnie giving such figures.

    Please stay with the facts before you accuse (ex-)colleagues and/or (ex-)customers of breaching contract.

  56. Anonymous Coward
    IT Angle

    Re: Rocks don't float - loose lips not needed

    I think the commenter was on about the fact someone was posting M-values earlier comparing sparc boxes of different generations which are released under NDA to customers. If your internal to Sun you might not have grasped that bit unless Sun plaster something on their webpages about NDA's for that info.

    I don't think they were attacking the speculation threads, like yours.

    Now waiting the Matt-B bashing about what he thinks M-values really mean, Matt, the stage is yours, let rip with all barrels on us sunshiners! :-)

  57. Anonymous Coward
    Go

    Re: re: RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: re: Drooling Matty

    Hey Matt, I'm still waiting for you to defend your lies. Can you defend yourself? I am especially interested in your ability to prove that Intel is making a profit from Itanium as you like to profess.

  58. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Troll

    RE: yet more ACs

    Re: Rocks don't float - loose lips not needed

    "....Now waiting the Matt-B bashing about what he thinks M-values really mean....." All the vendors have their secret "comparitive performance figures". No bashing needed. If you want to compare Sun kit then they would seem a sensible starting place. Personally, I take any vendor's (yes, even hp's) figures with a pinch of salt as I prefer testing with our application stack and own data in our own environment, as that is the only bench that really matters.

    Re: re: RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: re: Drooling Matty

    "Hey Matt, I'm still waiting for you to defend your lies....." But I note our drooler isn't keen to discuss Sun or Rock. Quel surprise!

    ".....I am especially interested in your ability to prove that Intel is making a profit from Itanium...." Like I said, go ask Mr Ortellini. Please feel free to call him a liar to his face. I'm sure you will as he'll only tell you truths you don't want to hear, and your stock response to reality seems to be denial, denial, denial.

    /SP&L

  59. Anonymous Coward
    WTF?

    re: RE: yet more ACs

    "Like I said, go ask Mr Ortellini. Please feel free to call him a liar to his face. I'm sure you will as he'll only tell you truths you don't want to hear, and your stock response to reality seems to be denial, denial, denial."

    So your proof that Intel makes a profit off of Itanium is that Otellini told you? Wow, you really are quite delusional aren't you? Oh well. That explains a lot now...

  60. Matt Bryant.
    Grenade

    re: RE: yet more ACs

    "So your proof that Intel makes a profit off of Itanium is that Otellini told you?"

    Yes. I talk to Mr Otellini all the time. He would never talk to a sunshiner.

  61. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    FAIL

    RE: re: RE: yet more ACs

    So sad that the Sunshiners are so desperate to avoid discussing the cancellation of Rock that they'll even wheel out the fake Matt Bryant login. What could it be that terrifies them so much about Rock, is it that they fear a domino effect - Rock is cancelled, which knocks demand for high-end Sun even harder than before, which reduces revenues to such a low point next gen Niagara has to be cancelled, which leaves Sunshienrs only with Slowaris on Galaxy, which stutters to a death against the better x64 offerings from hp, IBM and Dell using WIndows and Linux, which leaves the Sunshiners having to swallow their pride and learn another OS. Lol!

    /SP&L

  62. No Use for A Name

    isca 2009

    anybody know if the isca presentation on rock went down as scheduled this wedensday?

    http://isca09.cs.columbia.edu/papers.html

  63. Anonymous Coward
    Grenade

    re: RE: re: RE: yet more ACs

    So rocks dead, and no one cares. There, done, it's been discussed. Now let's move on.

    The only reason people attack HP is because you, Matt, hold HP up as the only good IT company. If you did not bring up HP on every Sun article, no one would attack you on said subject.

    So, Matt, where is your proof that Intel makes a profit from Itanium. Most analysts believe that Intel is losing money on Itanium, unless you count the 10Billion that HP gave Intel as a bribe to keep manufacturing it.

  64. Matt Bryant Silver badge
    Troll

    RE: re: RE: re: RE: yet more ACs

    "So rocks dead, and no one cares...." Whilst I'm pleased to see at least one Sunshiner has let a little reality into their life, the posts above seem to indicate there are a lot of Sunshiners going critical 'cos they care. I'm also guessing there are a number of Sun customers that will care greatly as Sun has left them little choice but to plan migrations off SPARC, and migrations mean risks and expense, so they will care a lot!

    "....The only reason people attack HP is because you, Matt, hold HP up as the only good IT company...." Nope, I didn't bring hp into this thread, you Sunshiners did with that autonomic response you have, where you immediately deal with any criticism of Sun by attacking the poster and another vendor. In fact, the first person to mention hp in this thread was SynnerCal, not me.

    "....So, Matt, where is your proof that Intel makes a profit from Itanium...." Ah, I see now that the quick admission of Rock's death was just another attempt to swing off topic to attack hp. Looks like that little exposure to reality was just too much for you to handle. What, no comment on what you think will be happening to the installed SPARC base now that Rock has gone the way of the dodo? Care to discuss if you think the Sun-badged M-series kit will have what it takes to stop hp and IBM capturing more of the high end? I'm guessing you won't.

    "....Most analysts believe that Intel is losing money on Itanium, unless you count the 10Billion that HP gave Intel as a bribe to keep manufacturing it." Or more to the point, if you are so convinced Itanium must be losing Intel money, why do you think they keep making it? For fun, maybe? Even a Sunshiner should be able to admit that if Intel keeps making and developing Itanium then there has to be a good commercial reason for Intel to do so, even if that plan is just to put pressure on IBM's Power and Sun's SPARC businesses - well, on IBM alone now. Stop for a second and consider - who benefits from Rock's death? Who will be going to those customers that had plans for Rock and trying to migrate them onto what other platforms? Who will make money from selling new servers to those customers? The choices are now Power or Itanium, or x64 if they can "downsize" their apps. And who benefits? Intel, hp and IBM. So Intel are unlikely to kill Itanium just yet, no matter how much you Sunshiners hyperventilate, as Intel needs to supply a counter to Power to ensure IBM doesn't snag the majority of those Sun SPARC refugees. You can FUD Itanium all you like, but it won't change the facts.

    The Sun slow-mo car-wreck has finally reached the bit where bits start flying off in all directions, and the customers are sitting in the vehicle with that horrified look on their faces as they realise just what a big mistake they have made. You can stand by the wreck saying "Move along, nothing to see here, move along" and it won't hide anything, people can see what is happening. Trying to deflect attention to another competitor is equally futile given the spectacle of the Sun implosion.

    /SP&L

  65. Anonymous Coward
    FAIL

    re: RE: re: RE: re: RE: yet more ACs

    "...Sun has left them little choice but to plan migrations off SPARC..."

    This is so patently false, I'm surprised even you find it worth writing. SPARC64 works just fine and is by no means the first SPARC chip that Sun has used that they did not design. Fujitsu continues to push SPARC while they abandon Itanium. Using your logic Matt, that means that they must be making more money from SPARC than Itanium, or why do it? If/when Intel abandons Itanium, who will produce them for HP then?

    HP is only going after the high-end with Itanium. If you want low-end Itanium running HP/UX then you're SOL... Heck, even their midrange is very limited. The SPARC range of servers all the way from the low-end M3000/Tseries all the way up to the High-End M9000 outperform Itanium. Also, when you reach the limit of Itanium's scalability, then what do you do? SPARC scales better now and based upon roadmaps, will scale better for the forseeable future.

    I don't care what other AC's say about HP or you. I am commenting on your statements. The comments that you made on a rock discussion... You made the statement that Otellini told you (figuratively I'm sure) that they were making money from Itanium. I quote:

    "Like I said, go ask Mr Ortellini. Please feel free to call him a liar to his face."

    Are you now saying that this does not imply that Otellini has stated that they are making money from Itanium? Again, using your logic, would they not be bragging about the profit if they were actually making one? They break out other CPU's... Why not Itanium? The answer is because tntel is looking for an exit strategy for Itanium and the only reason that it is still going is that they have a contract with HP.

    If they were making money from Itanium, why did HP have to give them 10 Billion so publicly?

    You refuse to answer direct questions. Is it because you can't stand the truth?

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