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By Michael Kanellos
Posted on ZDNet News: Jan 23, 2008 9:00:00 PM

Via Technologies is making processors based on a new architecture this year that may help the tiny company inch up the chipmaking pecking order.

The chips, which utilize the so-called Isaiah architecture, are expected to provide double the performance of the company's current chips but consume the same amount of power. They will come with two cores and run at 2 gigahertz.

Isaiah chips

The first Isaiah chips will make their debut toward the middle of the year. Via announced the architecture in 2004, but it has now released the fuller specifications.

Via occupies only a sliver of the market, but it has managed to land a few interesting design wins with its low-power chips. Hewlett-Packard has used Via chips in some computers sold in China, while Samsung Electronics and Oqo have put Via processors into handheld computers. Many thin-client makers also buy processors from the Taiwanese company.

For Via, the new processors sport a few firsts. For one thing, the chips can process instructions out of order, something chips from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices have done for years. This enables the chip to keep churning while waiting for crucial data.

To date, Via has stuck with in-order execution to keep power consumption low.

"With out-of-order execution, you can do things while waiting. The bad news is that you execute things that later get thrown away" and hence consume more power than necessary, said Glenn Henry, president of Centaur Technology, which is Via's processor design subsidiary.

The chips will also be capable of processing 64-bit software. AMD has had 64-bit chips since 2003. Intel came out with so-called x86 chips for desktop and notebooks that can process 64-bit software a few years later.

Although 64-bit chips have been out for years, few consumers or even business users actually use 64-bit software on their desktops and notebooks. The several delays to Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system hurt the evolution of a 64-bit market.

©2007 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. CNET , CNET.com , and the CNET logo are registered trademarks of CNET Networks, Inc. Used by permission.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 16 Talkback(s)
what is the comparison to the C7-D processor? is this just a 64bit upgrade?
or is this a totally new processor?

are there motherboards yet?
when?

is it in production yet?
when?

How Much?

happy

.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: wessonjoe Posted on: 01/29/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
been running 64 bits  galileon | 01/24/08
Yes, 64 bits DOES work like a charm, on Ubuntu and Linux in general,  DonnieBoy | 01/24/08
Old news...  JDThompson | 01/24/08
Via playing catch up, eh?  CobraA1 | 01/24/08
Still, about 99.9% of computers do not have enough memory to take advantage  DonnieBoy | 01/24/08
Via I can see - Microsoft I can't  CobraA1 | 01/24/08
You are right that untill the average computer is 64 bits, MS and others  DonnieBoy | 01/24/08
Then you can not take advantage of the 64 bits  GuidingLight | 01/24/08
The GIMP and Art of Illusion (nt)  CobraA1 | 01/25/08
Great to see another competitor with great low power chips.  DonnieBoy | 01/24/08
I wouldn't say "Great"...  jetman36 | 01/24/08
I don't know, the VIA chips enable some pretty innovative designs, I think  DonnieBoy | 01/24/08
Really?.....  jetman36 | 01/24/08
Not really (nt)  GuidingLight | 01/24/08
RE: Via makes way for 64-bit chips  Bill4 | 01/24/08
what is the comparison to the C7-D processor? is this just a 64bit upgrade?  wessonjoe | 01/29/08

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