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6 Sequent Unveils IA-64 Plans as it Readies Price and Performance Leading Pentium II Xeon Systems.


BEAVERTON, Ore.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 12, 1998--Sequent Computer Systems, the leader in Intel-based solutions for the data center, today said it will roll out IA-64-based server products, beginning with the Merced processor, alongside powerful new IA-32-based systems.

Sequent plans to offer IA-64-based systems, beginning with Merced, for both the midrange and high-end server markets. Sequent's Merced-based midrange systems will be scalable from 4 to 16 processors running UNIX UNIX

Operating system for digital computers, developed by Ken Thompson of Bell Laboratories in 1969. It was initially designed for a single user (the name was a pun on the earlier operating system Multics).
 or Windows NT (Windows New Technology) A 32-bit operating system from Microsoft for Intel x86 CPUs. NT is the core technology in Windows 2000 and Windows XP (see Windows). Available in separate client and server versions, it includes built-in networking and preemptive multitasking. . The first IA-64 generation of Sequent's NUMACenter will offer optimal price/performance in configurations of 16 processors and greater in a single system running any combination of UNIX and Windows NT in a dynamically managed environment. These systems will deliver extensive capabilities for mixed workload and resource management, in addition to new levels of performance, scalability, and availability.

Under Sequent's plans, both IA-32 and IA-64 processor architectures will co-exist over several years and inter-operate in its NUMACenter environment supporting strategic applications.

Sequent brings more than a decade of experience designing the complex chip-sets, hardware architectures and operating systems Operating systems can be categorized by technology, ownership, licensing, working state, usage, and by many other characteristics. In practice, many of these groupings may overlap.  required to link multiple Intel processors in large scalable systems. Sequent has already announced its intention to be a leader in developing an industry standard IA-64 Unix, making key technologies from it's Dynix/ptx Unix available to other vendors and partners. These technologies include NUMA (Non-Uniform Memory Access) A multiprocessing architecture in which memory is separated into close and distant banks. NUMA is similar to SMP, in which multiple CPUs share a single memory. However, in SMP, all CPUs access a common memory at the same speed.  capability, data center scalability, and in-depth optimization for Intel's architecture.

"Sequent's expertise in the delivery of highly scalable enterprise class systems, combined with the reliability, scalability, and performance of the Merced processor and future IA-64 products, will provide an optimum environment to address the data center server market segment," said Stephen L. Smith, corporate vice president, Microprocessor Products Group, and general manager, Santa Clara Processor Division of Intel Corporation.

"Intel's IA-64 product family enables a new class of systems that will bring our customers closer to a standards-based enterprise, from the desktop to the data center," said Jeff Pancottine, vice president of global marketing for Sequent. "Sequent brings leadership in scalable NUMA architectures and will play a key role in developing the leading UNIX for the IA-64 architecture."

IA-32 to IA-64 Compatibility and Migration

As a leader in Intel-based systems in the data center, Sequent is uniquely positioned to leverage its strengths in IA-32 based systems as IA-64 products become available. In contrast, the RISC RISC
 in full Reduced Instruction Set Computing

Computer architecture that uses a limited number of instructions. RISC became popular in microprocessors in the 1980s.
 to IA-64 transition required by some other vendors is difficult and expensive. Sequent's IA-64 migration program will provide customers the flexibility to deploy IA-64 bit applications or development environments while leveraging investments in Pentium II Xeon (processor) Pentium II Xeon - The successor to Intel Corporation's Pentium II processor.

The Xeon has the same P6 core as existing Pentium Pro/Pentium II units, but it supports a 100 MHz system bus and offers as much as 2 MB of level 2 cache.

http://intel.
 processor and future IA-32 based systems. Additionally, Sequent will offer significant forward compatibility for IA-32 applications currently running on its DYNIX/ptx UNIX. Sequent's IA-32 to IA-64 transition allows the customer to bypass big and little endian data incompatibility issues raised in many RISC to IA-64 migrations.

Data Warehousing and Electronic Commerce

The driving force behind the IA-64 family of processors will be innovation in application development that leverages the new technology. Demanding and strategically important application areas like data warehousing and electronic commerce in the telecommunications, financial services and retail markets will likely lead the way.

In complex application realms like operational data warehouses, IA-64 will spark significant innovation. Graphical User Interfaces will become richer, transactions will become smarter, and queries will become more inclusive. Decision support applications will address a finer granularity of data.

As enterprise resource planning See ERP.

(application, business) Enterprise Resource Planning - (ERP) Any software system designed to support and automate the business processes of medium and large businesses.
 applications and online transaction systems become further enmeshed en·mesh   also im·mesh
tr.v. en·meshed, en·mesh·ing, en·mesh·es
To entangle, involve, or catch in or as if in a mesh. See Synonyms at catch.
 with customer interaction, decision and fraud systems, a common infrastructure will become critical. In addition to offering leading scalability, availability and price performance, IA-64-based systems provide a common environment from desktop to the data center.

IA-64 technology puts fewer limitations in front of developers as they attempt to integrate complex e-commerce and related systems to support large data sets, faster I/O (Input/Output) The transfer of data between the CPU and a peripheral device. Every transfer is an output from one device and an input to another. See PC input/output.

I/O - Input/Output
 requirements, and vast scalability requirements as new users log on in greater numbers driving concurrency Operations that are performed simultaneously within the computer. For example, dual-core CPUs provide complete overlapping of two independent processes. See dual core, hyperthreading, multiprocessing, multitasking, multithreading, SMP and MPP.

concurrency - multitasking
 requirements.

Sequent's IA-64-based NUMACenter environment will address exactly these emerging requirements - tens-of-thousands of concurrent users, tens-of-terabytes of data and real time analysis on a scalable, re-deployable, standards-based environment.

About Sequent Computer Systems, Inc.

Sequent Computer Systems (Nasdaq:SQNT SQNT Sequent Computer Systems (stock symbol) ), the leader in Intel-based systems for the data center, is committed to the success of its end-user and system integrator customers. Sequent's platform architectures and services are optimized for the scalability, availability and manageability requirements of corporate and institutional data center environments leveraging industry-standard technologies and best-in-class partnerships. Sequent supports more than 10,000 installations worldwide, including many of the world's largest and most sophisticated OLTP (OnLine Transaction Processing) See transaction processing and OLCP.

OLTP - On-Line Transaction Processing
, DSS (1) (Digital Signature Standard) A National Security Administration standard for authenticating an electronic message. See RSA and digital signature.

(2) (Digital Satellite S
, and RDBMS (Relational DataBase Management System) See relational database and DBMS.

RDBMS - relational database
 applications.

For further information, phone Sequent at (503) 626-5700 or (800) 257-9044, or visit our Web site at www.sequent.com.

Trademarks

Sequent is a registered trademark and NUMACenter and DYNIX/ptx are trademarks of Sequent Computer Systems, Inc.. All brand and product names appearing in this release are registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective holders.
COPYRIGHT 1998 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 12, 1998
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