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331 points giuliomagnifico | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.296s | source
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bombcar ◴[] No.45377061[source]
Youngsters today don't remember it; x86 was fucking dead according to the press; it really wasn't until Athlon 64 came out (which gave a huge bump to Linux as it was one of the first OSes to fully support it - one of the reasons I went to Gentoo early on was to get that sweet 64 bit compilation!) that everyone started to admit the Itanium was a turd.

The key to the whole thing was that it was a great 32 bit processor; the 64 bit stuff was gravy for many, later.

Apple did something similar with its CPU changes - now three - they only swap when the old software runs better on the new chip even if emulated than it did on the old.

AMD64 was also well thought out; it wasn't just a simple "have two more bytes" slapped on 32 bit. Doubling the number of general purpose registers was noticeable - you took a performance hit going to 64 bit early on because all the memory addresses were wider, but the extra registers usually more than made up for it.

This is also where the NX bit entered.

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drob518 ◴[] No.45377177[source]
Itanium wasn’t a turd. It was just not compatible with x86. And that was enough to sink it.
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bombcar ◴[] No.45377228[source]
IIRC it didn't even do great against POWER and other bespoke OS/Chip combos, though it did way better there than generic x86.
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1. p_l ◴[] No.45385755[source]
With ex-Digital customers running OpenVMS, they held onto last-generation Alpha machines because they were substantially faster than the new Itanium ones in all practical uses. This is also why HP was finally forced to resurrect the nearly-complete EV7 chips