IBM to share chip intelligence

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Sony and Toshiba are expanding an alliance with IBM that will give the companies access to its chip breakthroughs while making the tech giant more of a player in the burgeoning market for consumer electronics. Under terms of the alliance, announced late Monday, Sony and Toshiba will be able to incorporate some of IBM's chip-making advances, such as Silicon on Insulator, into future processors for consumer-electronic devices. As a result, IBM's chips and intellectual property could wind up in products such as camcorders and PlayStation gaming consoles. Toshiba, which manufactures chips on behalf of Sony, will participate by lending assistance in manufacturing and chip design. IBM expects to draw from Toshiba's experience in building system-on-chip processors, single chips that contain all of the necessary elements to run a computing device. The alliance could help fulfill major strategic objectives for all three companies. For the past few years, IBM has been trying, with a fair amount of success, to get its chips into the consumer market. Nintendo, for instance, adopted the IBM's PowerPC for the GameCube console. IBM also has shown off low-power chips for cell phones. Sony, one of the world's largest buyers of processors, would place Big Blue into the vortex of the consumer-electronics market. "We're really gunning for MIPS (a processor architecture) and leaning on Motorola," said Ron Tessitore, vice president of PowerPC networking technology at IBM. Meanwhile, Sony and Toshiba will gain access to intellectual property and chip manufacturing techniques they would have had to develop independently at great expense. The two companies previously collaborated on the "emotion engine," the graphics chip inside the PlayStation 2. While the chip boosted the PlayStation 2's performance, the companies had to spend substantial amounts of money in development and manufacturing. So far, both Sony and Toshiba license IBM's Silicon on Insulator, a technique IBM developed to boost processor performance and reduce power consumption. The three companies have already said they will collaborate on a future processor architecture, called the Cell architecture, that some analysts speculate will end up in the PlayStation 3. The Cell architecture is expected to be able to enhance the performance of peer-to-peer computing and will be based, in part, on the existing PowerPC architecture, analysts say. Although he declined to discuss specifics, Bijan Davari, vice president of semiconductor development at IBM Microelectronics, said Cell chips would be "optimized for high-speed video as well as various other communication to the Internet." "It's a unique alliance in that it brings the most advanced technology user together with the most advanced technology manufacturer," he added. While the companies would not elaborate on whether Sony would adopt the PowerPC architecture, IBM is clearly interested in seeing its technology spread. IBM will offer higher performance processors and be "more liberal with licensing PowerPC cores," Tessitore said. Analysts believe the agreement marks a change in philosophy, whereby IBM will license both its chip technology and its manufacturing, allowing clients to mix and match to create custom chips. Currently, IBM licenses the technology and manufactures the chips for clients such as Apple Computer and Nintendo. "What's very different here...is this is the first time that a (customer) is getting a chance to change the cookie dough," said Rick Doherty, director of research for the Envisioneering Group. This is "the first time anyone has been allowed to change the recipe." It's also a crucial alliance for the three companies, eventually expanding beyond consumer electronics into high-performance embedded processors that are used in networking and communications equipment. In these markets, Intel has aligned itself with ARM, a company that designs chips of the same name for cell phones and handhelds. Advanced Micro Devices has aligned itself with MIPS, a competing processor architecture, which it acquired by buying chipmaker Alchemy Semiconductor. The third major embedded processor is the PowerPC, which IBM shares with Motorola. An embedded processor, defined loosely by its use, is typically found in any device that's not in a PC. One of IBM's main avenues for expanding the PowerPC is system-on-a-chip. These processors are becoming more popular for use in consumer-electronics and networking equipment because they contain all of the necessary elements to run a device. IBM's 405LP chip, for example, is a low-power processor designed to perform data encryption and speech recognition for personal digital assistants (PDA). How one designs and manufactures such a system-on-a-chip processor determines whether the chip will be suitable in performance and cost for use in consumer electronics. Under Monday's agreement, a team comprised of employees from IBM, Toshiba and Sony will spend several hundred million dollars over about four years to develop new process technologies for building chips with feature sizes ranging from 100 nanometers to as small as 50 nanometers on 300 millimeters or 12-inch wafers. Most current chips are manufactured using 130-nanometers processes on 200 millimeters of eight-inch wafers.
See Chips Central for the latest headlines on processors and semiconductors. To find out more about the computers and hardware that these chips are being used in, see ZDNet UK's Hardware News Section. Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Go to the Chips Central Forum. Let the Chips Central editor know what you think by email. And sign up for the weekly Chips Central newsletter.

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