The opportunities revealed by Sun's open-source CPU
By Jacqueline Emigh | Published December 13, 2007, 6:10 PM
By releasing the code for its new Niagara 2 processor into the open source community today, Sun is paving the way for its underlying architecture to eventually pop up in wireless and other embedded systems, and maybe even in future game consoles.
In announcing the open-sourcing of its multi-threaded Niagara 2 processor today, Sun Microsystems is looking at expanding the underlying computer architecture into new markets -- a strategy that earlier reaped successful results around both Sun's earlier Niagara 1 processor and IBM's open sourcing of its own Power processor architecture.
In a New York City press conference held to roll out Sun's Niagara 1 servers back in 2005, then-Sun CEO Scott McNealy pointed to plans by Sun to build a "community of developers" around the new servers, which were capable of running Linux on top of Sun's own Solaris operating system.
Because Sun leveraged its OpenSparc Initiative to release the processor code, the community that McNealy mentioned turned out to include hardware as well as application software developers.
An Italian company named Simply Risc, for example, took advantage of the code's availability to create a single-core processor with a wireless interface to mobile devices.
But also over the past few years, IBM adopted a similar approach with its Power processor.
Hardware developers have since been able to use the IBM Power architecture as the basis for embedded systems used as the inner workings of automotive electronic systems from Freescale, as well as within the Sony PlayStation 3, pointed out Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT, in an interview with BetaNews this afternoon.
"By opening up the code, IBM allowed developers to customize the architecture for different kinds of applications," King told BetaNews.
Now, with the open sourcing of Niagara 2, at least one hardware developer is already at work on customizing Sun's second-generation Niagara processor.
Polaris Micro, a China-based company, will reportedly use an OpenSparc variant in a system board for systems in the data storage and telecommunications industries.
Since when this is "open source" ?
So ARM based CPUs were open-source as well ? Were 8088 clones open-source based, perhaps ?
Nowadays it seems that "open source" has to be applied everywhere for fashion purposes.
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|great. now my phone will be filled with sparks
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|I salute / have saluted in the past, Sun most heartily.
Now, if only they could get into the mainstream that ¿grid array? technology they have, where numerous processors and memory modules can be strung together-- eliminating need for a bus.
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|Praises to Sun Phipps and others. This truly shows that they want to change for the better.
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