Sun gives away major chip designs
By Brooke Crothers and Stephen Shankland
Staff Writers, CNET News.com
March 2, 1999, 8:50 a.m. PT
update Sun Microsystems will give away core chip technology, mirroring the
open computer code movement in the Linux world.

Sun Microsystems is distributing the basic designs of its two major chip
architectures : Sparc and PicoJava. This is analogous to what's happening
in the Linux world where computer code is basically free. Netscape also
does this with its widely used Communicator browser.

The company will make tools and reference materials for its processors
available for download beginning at the end of this month.

"We'll proliferate this technology much more widely than the way we would
under the old model," said Harlan McGhan, manager of architecture marketing
for microelectronics at Sun.

The licensing terms let people use the information for research purposes,
requiring royalty payments to Sun only when people actually ship products,
McGhan said.

"Anyone can download, modify, and synthesize the processors for free. Sun
will charge a royalty only if customers ship the processors for revenue,"
according to Jim Turley writing in the Microprocessor Report's Embedded
Processor Watch.

"In the old days, Sun told start-ups and small companies, 'Thanks for your
interest, now come back when you're big enough.' Now we don't have to say
that," said McGhan.

"The maneuver is not unlike the open-source movement that is growing in
popularity among software developers. Like Linux, Apache, Netscape's
Communicator, and other software products, the 'source code' for
'synthesizing' Sun's processors will be free for the asking," according to
Turley.

After downloading the data, users may alter the core of the PicoJava or
SPARC processors in any way, even if they break a basic level of
compatibility--called binary compatibility--with other SPARC or Java
processors.

"Users will be encouraged--but not required--to give any such modifications
back to the community, so that third parties may benefit from the
enhancements," Turley said.

There is an important distinction compared to Linux, however. The design
freedom does not extend to shipping products. Before customers can make
chips and ship for revenue, they must demonstrate compliance.

Moreover, royalty terms must be negotiated with Sun before any chips ship
based on the downloaded designs. Royalty rates are negotiated on a
case-by-case basis.

The PicoJava-I technology will be available for download at the end of
March. Sun expects to make SPARC technology available by midyear, according
to Sun's McGhan. By the end of the summer, the designs for a 32-bit
UltraSparc chip will be on the Web, and the last microprocessor family, the
64-bit UltraSparc, will be up by the end of 1999, he said.

"On the surface, it appears to be a good move to broaden the appeal of
Sun's two processor families. Developers can evaluate SPARC and Java
processors with no up-front cost or risk." Turley said.

Sun's plan is similar to the way Sun is releasing the source code of the
Java 2--the original programming instructions before they're converted into
the low-level languages spoken by computer chips.

Until today, licensees had to pay an up-front royalty, a large impediment
to companies without lots of money, lawyers, or time, McGhan said.


From MAILER-DAEMON@cs.depaul.edu Tue Mar 2 16:17:49 1999