Intel Shows Off Silverthorne And Tukwila
News The Itanium architecture also has an overhaul in the works; Intel released first details of the 65nm (nanometre) quad-core Tukwila, which the company claims as the world's first two-billion transistor microprocessor.
[February 4, 2008, 17:14]
Cosmic Threat To Tomorrow's Computers
Blog Tukwila is four cores of 2GHz Itanium embedded in 30 megabytes of on-chip cache, together with Intel's next-generation memory controller/cross-point interconnect - which, as any supercomputer designer will tell you, is as important as the details...
[February 4, 2008, 23:35]
Itanium Ready For Radical Reworking
News Intel's Tukwila processor will be a significant departure from earlier Itanium models, but bigger changes will come with its sequel, Poulson. When the Tukwila chip arrives in 2008, the biggest difference will be system-level changes such as how the...
[March 9, 2006, 14:55]
Intel Avoids Trademark Tangle With New Code Name
News Tanglewood, thy name is Tukwila. To avoid a trademark dispute, Intel has changed the code name of Tanglewood, a version of its Itanium expected to come out after 2005 that will contain several processor cores, to Tukwila, an Intel spokesman said.
[December 19, 2003, 8:45]
XML Web Services Allow Police Agencies To Share Data In King County, Washington State, In The RAIN (Regional Automated Information Network) Project
White Papers Until recently, an officer encountering an individual in Tukwila would not have had access to that individual's prior history of interactions with the law in surrounding areas such as Seattle and Bellevue.
[January 26, 2005, 23:00]
Intel Updates Itanium Line With 'Kittson'
News However, he offered more details on Poulson, the Itanium processor after Tukwila. Another key difference between the two generations of technologies is that Poulson will be a 32nm chip, unlike Tukwila, which is based on the 65nm process.
[June 15, 2007, 14:49]
Intel To Unveil Latest Itanium
News Poulson is scheduled to succeed Tukwila, an Itanium processor due in 2007 that had previously been code-named Tanglewood. One major change will come with the Tukwila generation of chips. Intel will on Tuesday offer a further glimpse into the future...
[March 1, 2005, 14:00]
Intel Puts New Server Chips On Roadmap
News In 2007 or thereabouts, the first Common Platform Architecture Itanium 2, code-named Tukwila, will be released. Finally, the Common Platform Architecture Xeon -- Whitefield -- is due in what Talwalkar said was 'the future', but is expected at...
[September 8, 2004, 12:45]
Intel To Boost Single-core Performance
News McNairy said improvements in "the single-stream performance" of a core processor can be expected in the next transition from Montecito to Tukwila. The Tukwila chip is expected to arrive within the timeframe of 2008 to 2009, while Poulson is...
[October 3, 2007, 14:03]
Intel Server Revamp Mirrors AMD's Approach
News Further glimpses have come from server makers, who are eager for CSI's debut in the "Tukwila" Itanium chip, due in 2008. But in October, Intel delayed Tukwila to 2008 and cancelled Whitefield. From a pure performance perspective, when we get to...
[September 11, 2006, 15:10]
The Big Interview: Pat Gelsinger
News The first realisation of that is Tukwila [quad-core Itanium] in late 2008, the next step in the product family, where we move to common system architecture elements, as well as full alignment on design tools and process.
[February 26, 2007, 13:39]
Intel 'targeting IBM' With Itanium
News Gelsinger offered almost no details about Poulson other than the fact that it would arrive after the 2007 Itanium version code-named Tukwila and would fit into the Tukwila server platform, code-named Richford.
[March 2, 2005, 10:20]
Intel Reveals Itanium Details
News Tukwila, the Montecito successor coming in 2007, will sport these same features but contain more processor cores and probably other enhancements. Montecito will have two cores, while Tukwila will have at least four, with plans for up to 16.
[July 26, 2004, 8:45]
Cosmic Threat To Tomorrow's Computers
Blog Comment Excellent insight about the possibility that Intel might choose to "skip" the 45nm generation for the Tukwila. This is indeed something that happens from time to time, when new developments require some sort of significant change in design or...
[February 5, 2008, 8:55]
Web Services Help Law Enforcement Agencies Share Critical Information In Real Time
White Papers Now, an officer in Tukwila who encounters an individual with no local rap sheet can easily discover that there's a long rap sheet on the individual in Bellevue - information that would have been much harder to obtain prior to deployment of the new...
[June 11, 2004, 0:00]
TerraService.NET: An Introduction To Web Services
White Papers The paper presents the design of two USDA applications that interoperate with database and web service resources in Fort Collins Colorado and the TerraService web service located in Tukwila Washington.
[June 21, 2007, 0:00]
Intel Admits Itanium Embarrassment
News Montvale due in 2007, Tukwila in 2008, and Poulson some time after that. We looked at the road map — the embarrassment of Montecito — where we needed to be with Montvale, with Tukwila, with Poulson, and what does it take to execute.
[March 24, 2006, 9:10]
Intel Plans Itanium-server Domination
News Tukwila, formerly Tanglewood, a version of the Itanium that will be released after 2005, will feature a number of chip cores on the same piece of silicon. Although Tukwila will have a large cache, the chip cores will be smaller than Xeon cores...
[January 14, 2004, 8:00]
CSI: Santa Clara - Solving The $10bn Mystery
Leader Then it's a two-year pause until Tukwila in 2009, and things really get steaming with a major architectural revamp in Poulson at "a later time". HP's launch of its Arches chipset, powering the latest generation of Integrity and Superdome servers...
[March 21, 2006, 16:00]
Intel Diversifies Itanium Family
News There will even be a budget, low-power version of Tukwila, the multicore offspring of Itanium that is expected to be released toward the middle of the decade. Intel described two new technologies for its Itanium family and fleshed out its plans for...
[February 19, 2004, 9:20]

