Intel on Wednesday released new performance specifications for its forthcoming McKinley chip, the successor to its 64-bit Itanium processor. Powerful 64-bit chips are key to Intel's strategy of edging out servers based on Sun Microsystems in the high-end data center market and could give CIOs a more economical option for running critical applications such as databases and transaction systems.
McKinley, or Itanium 2, as Intel is now calling the chip, will debut this summer at a speed of 1 GHz and will feature 3 Mbytes of on-die (level 3) cache and three times the internal bus bandwidth of its predecessor. All that adds up to screaming application performance, the company says. For instance, Intel says a four-processor Itanium 2 system will handle more than twice the number of sales and distribution transactions as earlier Itanium systems. In processing secure E-commerce transactions that require Secure Sockets Layer decryption, Intel says a two-processor Itanium 2 system in tests performed 1,440 transactions per second, about the same number performed by a four-processor Itanium system.
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