Home GADGETS Former Intel CPU engineer details how internal x86-64 efforts were suppressed prior...

Former Intel CPU engineer details how internal x86-64 efforts were suppressed prior to AMD64’s success

Former Intel CPU engineer details how internal x86-64 efforts were suppressed prior to AMD64’s success


Former Intel CPU engineer details how internal x86-64 efforts were suppressed prior to AMD64’s success

Earlier today on Twitter, AMD engineer Phil Park identified a curious nugget of PC architectural history from, of all places, a year-old Quora answer posted by former Intel engineer Robert Colwell. The nugget indicates that Intel could have beaten AMD to the x86-64 punch if the former wasn’t dead-set on the x64-only Itanium line of CPUs. The historical context of this story and the comments within are fascinating, especially considering today’s desktop CPU architectures, where “64-bit” is immediately understood to mean x86-64 — because who wants a computer that can’t natively run most applications made for a PC?

To Intel’s credit, it isn’t that Intel Itanium processors completely did away with x86 software and architecture. However, they were intended to in the long run, especially as a measure of definitively striking down AMD in the marketplace. Unfortunately, this meant that the pure 64-bit architecture of Intel Itanium did not allow 32-bit (x86) applications to run natively, and the emulation solutions performed poorly. As a result, Itanium landed with a thud in the market despite being among the first to the 64-bit punch. Backward compatibility matters a great deal for big software and hardware purchases of any kind, but especially in the PC market. This fact was especially true in the server and enterprise markets where Intel targeted the Itanium CPUs.

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