MAJC(TM) Press Release - August 17, 1999
Original Document
SUN DISCLOSES DETAILS OF MAJC ARCHITECTURE
General Purpose Architecture to Provide Foundation for Convergence
Microprocessors
AUGUST 17, 1999 Palo Alto, CALIF. Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ:
SUNW)
disclosed the technical details of the company's groundbreaking MAJC
microprocessor architecture today at the Hot Chips conference. Sun
will use
this architecture to address the enormous streams of visual and audio
data that
currently flow over networks and the Internet.
The MAJC architecture was designed to enable processors to deliver a
new class
of media-rich user experience. This architecture takes advantage of
increasing
amounts of data coming into the home and the prevalence of Java
technology in
the marketplace to provide a foundation for a new category of
products such as
interactive entertainment devices, integrated communications devices
and
set-top boxes that utilize large amounts of media-rich data.
"Sun's vision is a world where millions of users and billions of
devices are
connected via the network. The MAJC architecture fits this vision by
enabling
a new category of devices that bring a new level of experience to the
users,"
said Mel Friedman, president of Microelectronics at Sun Microsystems,
Inc.
"This architecture is designed to deliver high-performance, low-cost
processing
over a very broad set of applications, from multi-protocol network
infrastructure devices to the consumers' living rooms. In order to
meet the
demands of the rapidly emerging markets for media-rich networked
technology,
Sun's design team worked on development of the MAJC architecture for
nearly
four years to ensure that this project would come to fruition."
The MAJC architecture takes advantage of three growing industry
trends: the
increasing demand for media-rich user experience, the proliferation
of the Java
programming language and the increasing availability of networked
bandwidth.
The architecture is simple and data-type agnostic, while at the same
time fully
supporting the processor-independent nature and multi-threading
capabilities of
the Java language.
Chips based on the general-purpose MAJC architecture should be able
to process
complex graphics and voice data while being able to compute at very
high clock
rates in networked environments. The architecture, programmable in
the Java
programming language, C or C++, is designed to be extremely scalable
and
supports the addition of multiple processors to be placed on a single
die.
The MAJC architecture draws from DSP (digital signal processor) and
VLIW (very
long instruction word) architectures to improve the handling of
natural data
types. Processors based on the architecture should be able to
support
high-speed execution of up to four instructions in parallel, while
eliminating
the heavy silicon overhead
usually required to schedule and execute these instructions. At the
same time,
the MAJC architecture provides freedom and flexibility in determining
the best
possible sequence of instructions to ensure that all functional units
are in
use virtually all the time. As a result, all data types, even
natural data
types (digitized analog signals such as voice and video), are using
the same
functional units within the MAJC microprocessor.
Copies of Chief Architect Marc Tremblay's Hot Chips presentation on
the MAJC
architecture can be obtained by visiting the following Web site:
http://www.sun.com/microelectronics/MAJC beginning August 18, 1999.
Sun plans
to disclose the first implementation of this architecture, which will
be used
to enhance the capabilities of a Sun workstation, around the
Microprocessor
Forum this fall.
About Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision, "The Network Is The
Computer
(TM)," has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ: SUNW), to its
position as
a leading provider of high quality hardware, software and services
for
establishing enterprise-wide intranets and expanding the power of the
Internet.
With more than $11.5 billion in annual revenues, Sun can be found in
more than
150 countries and on the World Wide Web at http://www.sun.com.
1999 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, MAJC, Java and The Network Is
The Computer
are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in
the United
States and other countries.
Copyright 1994-1999 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 901 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, CA 94303 USA. All rights reserved.
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