Showing posts with label Rick Hetherington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rick Hetherington. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2013

SPARC T5 Partner Cast

[SPARC T5, courtesy Oracle Corporation]
SPARC T5 Partner Cast
Abstract:
John Shell, Senior Director of Systems Partner Enablement for Oracle, hosts Rick Hetherington, VP of Hardware Development for Oracle, to discuss Oracle’s SPARC T5 Processor.

Interview Notes:
SPARC T4 Summary:
- S3 Cores, clocked at 3.0 GHz
- Crypto Cores inserted into Core with additional instructions, highest level of crypto performance in the industry

SPARC T5 Summary:
- Same S3 Cores
- Faster clock rate, more cores
- Improvement in 1 year

Solaris Summary:
- Solaris 10 and Solaris 11 have both been optimized for T4 & T5
- Enhanced security library, thread scheduling, improved vm system
- Adding additional features into SPARC for Oracle stack optimizations
- Industry leading performance on long list of ISV's

Partner Summary:
- Oracle continues to invest hevily into SPARC and Solaris
- Continual flow of ever improving SPARC processors
- SPARC processors will continue to form heart of engineered systems

Q-A
- Is T5 a Systems on a Chip? Yes
- What is the value of 28nm? Transistors are smaller, more functionality on die, improved cycle time
Media:
[埋込みオブジェクト:http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9?isVid=1&isUI=1]

SPARC T5 Deep Dive

[SPARC T5 Microdie, courtesy Oracle Corporation]
Abstract:
The SPARC platform has existed for over 25 years, with continued binary compatibility. The latest of these processors, the SPARC T5, is about to be released. Oracle published a short written interview with the Rick Hetherington, who is leading the charge on newer SPARC processors.

SPARC T5 Deep Dive:
Oracle regularly publishes short question-answer articles, called Deep Dives, regarding new platforms during the release phase. This latest SPARC T5 release is no different. An overview and questions are listed below. This is the article, for the answer to the questions.
Rick Hetherington, Oracle’s vice president of hardware development, manages a team of architects and performance analysts who design Oracle’s M- and T-series processors. In this interview, Hetherington describes the technical details of the new SPARC T5 processor and expands on the process that is used to design these innovative chips.

Q: What were the design objectives of the SPARC T5 processor?
...
Q: So what’s new in the SPARC T5?
...
Q: This is mainly a performance increase story then?
...
Q: Does the SPARC T5 also support both single-threaded and multi-threaded applications?
...
Q: Was there anything in the design process that surprised you, or did things go the way you expected?
...
Q: And how do you know which workloads you want to model on?
...
Q: What do you mean when you say trace?
...
Q: What do you consider innovative in the SPARC T5?
...
Q: What kinds of applications will benefit the most from the SPARC T5?
...
Q: What about the security features in the T5?
...
Q: I’d like to know if there was any kind of optimization with Solaris 11.
...
Q: And the Solaris binary compatibility still applies?
...
Q. What's the most important thing you want customers to know about the SPARC T5 processor?
...

Conclusions:
The SPARC platform continues to seesignificant archtiectural improvements - the T5 is no exception, with combined higher clock speed and double the processing cores. This is tremendously good news to the telecommunications industry, which has been waiting for an upgraded Open Systems platform.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Oracle Magazine: SPARC at 25


[SPARC International Inc. Member logo, courtesy Aurora VLSI]
Abstract:
The SPARC architecture is perhaps the first and longest lasting open and mainstram computing architecture in human history. In Ocrober 2012, Network Management published a reminder for people to attend the "SPARC at 25" event at the Computer History Museum. In November of 2012, Network Management published an short article pointing to the replay of the historic events: SPARC at 25: Past, Present, and Future. Diana Reichardt published an article "SPARC at 25" in the bi-monthly printed Oracle Magazine, covering the event.

[SPARC International, Inc. logo, courtesy sparc.org]
Why SPARC?
Diana opens her article, regarding the event at the Computer History Museum, with the following question, "Why SPARC?" The article continues, with the following opening paragraph.
In 1987, a small startup called Sun Microsystems developed its own microprocessor, called SPARC, and introduced the Sun-4, the first computer based on the new chip. On November 1, 2012, many early SPARC team members, along with Oracle President Mark Hurd and Executive Vice President of Systems at Oracle John Fowler, convened at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, for SPARC at 25: Past, Present, and Future. This event provided a look back at the history of SPARC and the early days of Sun. Stories from the participants, including all of the company’s founders, illustrated the complex nature of systems design and the challenges of launching a high-technology company in a fiercely competitive industry.
The on-line reprint is no substitute for the written article, with it's high-resolution pictures of the event. This, of course, is no substitute for the video of the actual event, whose link was published in the former Network Management article.

[Photos courtesy Oracle Magazine Jan/Feb 2013 Edition]
SPARC 25th Anniversary Highlights
If you do not have the time to watch the video of the creators of SPARC, on this 25th anniversary - Oracle published a highlights clip which is under 30 minutes. The highlights include current captains of industry, guiding SPARC today.
[Start of the SPARC timeline, courtesy Oracle Corporation]
Explore the SPARC Time Line
Diana included a link at the end of her article titled "Explore the SPARC Time Line" which leads to an amazing timeline of events surrounding SPARC, that no person interested in systems should miss!


[Oracle logo, courtesy Oracle Corporation]
Who is Diana Reichardt?
Diana Reichardt is a senior writer at Oracle. Besides this Jan/Feb issue in Oracle Magazine, she had published a pair of articles "Conversations with Oracle Innovators" through Oracle Corporate Communications with Rick Hetherington.

Conversations with Oracle Innovators
Q&A with Rick Hetherington
By Diana Reichardt
Rick Hetherington, Oracle’s vice president of hardware development, manages a team of architects and performance analysts who design Oracle’s M- and T-series processors. Hetherington’s team tracks the performance of these designs in great detail, from the moment they are conceived until they are released as products. In this interview, Hetherington explains the design process and how the team’s day-to-day work is focused on what SPARC customers will have in their data centers three to five years from now.

Conversations with Oracle Innovators
SPARC T4 Deep Dive With Rick Hetherington
By Diana Reichardt
Rick Hetherington, Oracle’s vice president of hardware development, manages a team of architects and performance analysts who design Oracle’s M- and T-series processors. In this interview, Hetherington describes the technical details of the new SPARC T4 processor and explains why he thinks it is going to be an eye-opener for the industry.
Other fairly recent Oracle Magazine articles published by Diana include:

FEATURE
Complete Power
By Diana Reichardt
Oracle Magazine: May/June 2011

SPARC hardware and the Oracle Solaris operating system: High-performance engine for mission-critical apps

COMMENT: Analyst’s Corner
The SPARC/Oracle Solaris Platform Evolution
By Diana Reichardt
Oracle Magazine: May/June 2011

SPARC hardware and the Oracle Solaris operating system: High-performance engine for mission-critical apps

AT ORACLE: News
SPARC Torches Benchmark
By Diana Reichardt
Oracle Magazine: March/April 2011

Oracle’s new SPARC Supercluster, Oracle Exalogic Elastic Cloud T3-1B, and Oracle Solaris 11 break records and set new standards for performance and availability.
Diana's writing is a pleasure to read.
Concluding Thoughts:
No modern computing professional should be without the background and understanding of the history of computing from this period of time. The future always has elements of the past hinting forward. SPARC is no different, in this case - many of the ideas in modern computing history would not have ever existed, had it not been for SPARC innovators. More innovations are sure to come.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

SPARC at 25: Past, Present and Future (Replay)

In October, Network Management published a reminder concerning:

SPARC at 25: Past, Present and Future
Presented by the Computer History Museum Semiconductor Special Interest Group


[フレーム]

If you missed it, you can view the replay here, thanks to YouTube!

Panelists presenting include industry giants:
Andy Bechtolsheim, Rick Hetherington, Bill Joy, David Patterson, Bernard Lacroute, Anant Argawal

Thursday, November 1, 2012 Event: 11:00 AM
Lunch: 12:00 Noon

Computer History Museum
1401 North Shoreline Blvd.
Mountain View, California 94043

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

SPARC at 25: Past, Present and Future

DON'T MISS...

SPARC at 25: Past, Present and Future
Presented by the Computer History Museum Semiconductor Special Interest Group


This panel will discuss the origins and evolution of the SPARC processor on its 25th anniversary. When a small startup -- Sun Microsystems -- decided to develop their own microprocessor in the mid 1980's, it chose a Reduced Instruction Set Computers (RISC) architecture. The 1987 debut of the Sun-4, the first SPARC based computer, ignited meteoric growth at Sun and ultimately transformed the industry. The panelists will recollect the technical and business challenges of this revolutionary path, the risks and rewards of the development of multiple generations of increasingly complex chips, and the critical role of software. The panel will also address the current state of the market, and speculate on future challenges and opportunities.

Panelists presenting include industry giants:
Andy Bechtolsheim, Rick Hetherington, Bill Joy,David Patterson, Bernard Lacroute, Anant Argawal

Thursday, November 1, 2012
Event: 11:00 AM
Lunch: 12:00 Noon

Computer History Museum
1401 North Shoreline Blvd.
Mountain View, California 94043
Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /