mlh@houxl.UUCP (M.HARRISON) (05/04/85)
<EAT THIS LINE> By now some of you may have read that we (AT&T) are for the first time selling commercially our WE32100 32 bit microprocessor family (now aka "The UNIX Microsystem", thanks to someone in marketing). I'm not going to comment on the performance of our chipset relative to the other 32 bit vendors out there (Motorola and National), as I'm sure this information will be forthcoming from less biased sources. Suffice to say that we think its pretty good. However, I'd like to give some details on the devices. All members of the chipset have full 32 bit address and data buses and are implemented in 1.5 micron CMOS. The cornerstone chips are the WE32100 CPU and WE32101 MMU. The devices were initially developed for in-house use over the last few years. They've been through several iterations and are now mature and more importantly bug-free (as far as we know!) Also available is an 80 bit (double extended precision) IEEE standard floating-point Math Accelerator Unit. Single-precision arithmetic is also supported. This guy really flies, 80 bit register to register multiplies take 67 cycles and adds take 23. It operates as a tightly- coupled co-processor with our CPU or as a peripheral to other 32 bit processors. Also announced, but not available till third quarter this year are DRAM and DMA Controllers. All devices come in two speeds, 10 and 14 MHz. One neat feature is our packaging, they are rectangular ceramic pin grid arrays. Pins are on 100 mil centers with every third row missing to allow for a routing channel on the PC board. This will generally reduce the number of layers in the PC board and allow more effective power and ground routing, thereby enhancing low-noise operation. On the top of each package is an array of small rectangular metal pads, each on corresponding to the pin below it. We call them scratch pads, they're great for scope probing. ZIF and LIF sockets are available. As far as prototyping goes, there is an evaluation board that facilitates hardware and software experimentation (including varying wait-states!). For development, we're offering a Hardware-Software Development System which provides in-circuit emulation, a high-level debugger which resides partly in firmware and partly on a UNIX host, and a plug-in interface to the HP 64000 Logic Development System. For software, there is a C compiler, an assembler, and many other packages available. Basically, if it runs on a 3B-2, it can be made to work on the chipset. If there's interest, I'll be happy to either post or e-mail more info. If you want data sheets feel free to call (800) 372-2447. Marc Harrison AT&T Bell Labs, Holmdel (201) 949-1779