10 comments

  • WarOnPrivacy 3 hours ago
    > AMD entered the CPU market with reverse-engineered Intel 8080 clone 50 years ago

    Moral: Awesome productivity happens when IP doesn't get in the way.

    • WaitWaitWha 3 hours ago
      If I recall correctly, they were also licensed to produce some clones.

      I remember when in the early 90s the am386-40MHz came out. Everyone was freaking out how we are now breaking the sound barrier. There was a company Twinhead(?) that came out with these 386-40Mhz motherboards with buses so overclocked most video cards would fry. Only the mono Hercules cards could survive. We thought our servers were the shizzle.

      • dspillett 1 hour ago
        That wasn't the first time they had similar products out-speeding Intel. I have the CPU from the first PC I owned tacked to the front of my current main PC with a Ryzen. That was clocked at 20MHz IIRC (I'm at parental home ATM so can't confirm) where the Intel units topped out at 12MHz (unless overclocked, or course).
      • fweimer 3 hours ago
        Weren't legal protections for semiconductor masks rather lax in the 70s, at least in the United States? You might need certain patent licenses for the manufacturing process, but the chip itself was largely unprotected.
        • mrandish 1 hour ago
          > "In the summer of 1973, during their last day working at Xerox, Ashawna Hailey, Kim Hailey, and Jay Kumar took detailed photos of an Intel 8080 pre-production sample"

          I was interested in this and followed the links to the original interview at: https://web.archive.org/web/20131111155525/http://silicongen... which was interesting:

          > "Xerox being more of a theoretical company than a practical one let us spend a whole year taking apart all of the different microprocessors on the market at that time and reverse engineering them back to schematic. And the final thing that I did as a project was to, we had gotten a pre-production sample of the Intel 8080 and this was just as Kim and I were leaving the company. On the last day I took the part in and shot ten rolls of color film on the Leica that was attached to the lights microscope and then they gave us the exit interview and we went on our way. And so that summer we got a big piece of cardboard from the, a refrigerator came in and made this mosaic of the 8080. It was about 300 or 400 pictures altogether and we pieced it together, traced out all the logic and the transistors and everything and then decided to go to, go up North to Silicon Valley and see if there was anybody up there that wanted to know about that kind of technology. And I went to AMI and they said oh, we're interested, you come on as a consultant, but nobody seemed to be able to take the project seriously. And then I went over to a little company called Advanced Micro Devices and they wanted to, they thought they'd like to get into it because they had just developed an N-channel process and this was '73. And I asked them if they wanted to get into the microprocessor business because I had schematics and logic diagrams to the Intel 8080 and they said yes."

          From today's perspective, just shopping a design lifted directly from Intel CPU die shots around to valley semi companies sounds quite remarkable but it was a very different time then.

        • rasz 2 hours ago
          yep, thus intel going microcode and patent route.
    • elif 2 hours ago
      100% agree. It's clearest to see in China. IP has been transformed from a mechanism to maintain competition and into a mechanism to maintain market control.
      • gyomu 2 hours ago
        Given that market control is one of the few ultimate gating factors that makes you thrive or die as a company, it’s no surprise that anything that could be used as a mechanism to maintain market control would be.
      • expedition32 1 hour ago
        European countries "acquired" quite a few Chinese trade secrets in the past. And from eachother to be fair.

        IP is one of those things you invent once you made it to the top.

  • izacus 6 hours ago
    I wonder if in 2025 a company would even allowed to start before being curb stomped by Intel's IP lawyers. After all, they started making clones, something that China gets accused of a lot.
    • BlueToth 5 hours ago
      Intel customers required a second source supplier, i.e. IBM, thus, AMD was providing that for Intel in the beginning. Then later on AMD created the x86 64bit commands, which Intel adopted from AMD so now both share the same ISA.
      • izacus 2 hours ago
        Can you explain what you tried so say with that?

        Customer needs don't really matter in cases where monopolist (ab)uses the law to kill competition. That's the MAIN reason why monopolies are problematic.

        • debugnik 1 hour ago
          The "required" in that sentence should be read strictly: some customers, mainly governmental, wouldn't have bought Intel chips in the first place without access to alternative suppliers (AMD and previously VIA). Intel had to give in.
        • zenethian 1 hour ago
          Neither company were like they are now back then. Intel needed a second supplier for their chips because nobody trusted manufacturing from a single source provider.
        • sokoloff 1 hour ago
          I read GP to mean that Intel had strong incentive to cooperate in order to make the initial sale. That’s where the customer need was relevant.
    • jezek2 5 hours ago
      You can do it with HW accelerated emulation like Apple did with M1 CPUs. They implemented x86 compatible behavior in HW so the emulation has very good performance.

      Another approach was Transmeta where the target ISA was microcoded, therefore done in "software".

      • izacus 2 hours ago
        Apple didn't implement x86 ISA in hardware, they have a few instructions that change memory behaviour to make emulation faster.
      • BlueToth 5 hours ago
        They said that they implemented x86 ISA memory handling instructions, that substantially sped up the emulation. I don't remember exactly which now, but they explained this all in a WWDC video about the emulation.
        • fweimer 3 hours ago
          There's a Linux patch that exposes it via prctl: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240410211652.16640-1-zayd_qums...

          There's also the CFINV instruction (architectural, part of FEAT_FLAGM), which helps with emulating the x86-64 CMP instruction.

        • als0 4 hours ago
          Not instructions per se. Rosetta is a software based binary translator, and one of the most intensive parts about translating x86 to ARM is having to make sure all load/store instructions are strictly well ordered. To alleviate this pressure, Apple implemented the Total Store Ordering (TSO) feature in hardware, which makes sure that all ARM load and store instructions (transparently) follow the same memory ordering rules as x86.
          • nineteen999 3 hours ago
            It is funny to hear sometimes though:

            "Apple created a chip which is not an X86! Its awesome! And the best thing about it is ... it does TSO does like an X86! Isn't that great?"

            • dontlaugh 2 hours ago
              Only some of the time.

              I think the last time I ran amd64 on my mac was months ago, a game.

    • tiffanyh 6 hours ago
      If the company was based in the EU, local regulation might encourage reverse-engineering.

      See tangentially related topic from yesterday: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46362927

    • phendrenad2 5 hours ago
      Maybe if you find a company as small as Intel was at the time.
  • tracker1 6 hours ago
    I'm still a heavy advocate for requiring second/dual-sourcing in govt contracts... literally for anything that can be considered essential infrastructure or communications technology and medicine. A role of govt in a capitalist society is to ensure competition and domestic availability/production as much as possible.

    While my PoV is US centered, I feel that other nations should largely optimize for the same as much as possible. Many of today's issues stem from too much centralization of commercial/corporatist power as opposed to fostering competition. This shouldn't be in the absence of a baseline of reasonable regulation, just optimizing towards what is best for the most people.

    • gosub100 6 hours ago
      Suppose we got nuked or some calamity caused the interruption of all the fancy x-nanoneter processes. What would we actually miss out on? I don't know what the latest process nodes we have stateside are, but let's say we could produce 2005 era cpus here. What would we actually miss out on? I don't think it would affect anything important. You could do everything we do today, just slower. I think the real advancement is in software, programming languages, and libraries.
      • icedchai 3 hours ago
        Software is much, much more bloated today than it was in 2005. 64-bit CPUs were available, but not quite mainstream yet. A "high end" consumer system had a couple gigabytes of RAM and chipset limitations generally capped you out at 4 or 8 gigs. You were lucky to have two CPU cores.

        If you took today's software and tried running it on a memory constrained, slow, 2005 era system, you'd be in for some pain.

        • MarsIronPI 2 hours ago
          I used to daily-drive a Thinkpad X200 from 2008. As soon as you touch the modern (i.e. bloated) web, you feel the slowness. Other than that and gaming, it ran fine.
      • tracker1 6 hours ago
        I'm talking about way more than just CPUs... And for your question, we'd pretty much miss out on modern-like mobile phones entirely. 90nm -> 18A/1.8nm is a LOT of reduction in size and energy... not to count the evolution in battery and display technology over the same period.

        Now apply that to weapons systems in conflict against an enemy that DOES have modern production that you (no longer) have... it's a recipe for disaster/enslavement/death.

        China, though largely hamstrung, is already well ahead of your hypothetical 2005 tech breakpoint.

        Beyond all this, it's not even a matter of just slower, it's a matter of even practical... You couldn't viably create a lot of websites that actually exist on 2005 era technology. The performance memory overhead just weren't there yet. Not that a lot of things weren't possible... I remember Windows 2000 pretty fondly, and you could do a LOT if you had 4-8x what most people were buying in RAM.

        • fooker 6 hours ago
          China can make CPUs around as good as 2016-18 intel now.
        • 15155 49 minutes ago
          > Now apply that to weapons systems in conflict against an enemy that DOES have modern production that you (no longer) have... it's a recipe for disaster/enslavement/death.

          How do you maintain this production with a sudden influx of ballistic missiles at the production facility - or a complete naval blockade of all food calories to your country?

      • numpad0 2 hours ago
        I have an unpopular pet theory: the exponentially growing software bloat actually exists to slow computers back down to bearable levels for common folks, and that's why the most bloated frameworks have consistently replaced obsolete, less bloated ones, throughout the last decade.

        Why else are everything now seem to be wrappers for wrappers? What if the bloat was, subconsciously or whatever, the point?

      • fweimer 3 hours ago
        I think there have been many improvements since 2005 that are not dependent at all on the process node.
      • unethical_ban 5 hours ago
        One superpower being in 2005 for CPUs and another being in 2030, and at cold/hot war, would be decisive.

        If society as a whole reverted to 2005, we would be fine.

  • ksec 8 hours ago
    If Intel decide to focus on Foundry, I just wish AMD and Intel could work together and make a subset clean up of x86 ISA open source or at least available for licensing. I dont want it to end up like MIPS or POWER ISA where everything is too little too late.
    • holowoodman 7 hours ago
      A subset of an ISA will be incompatible with the full ISA and therefore be a new ISA. No existing software will run on it. So this won't really help anyone.

      And x86 isn't that nice to begin with, if you do something incompatible, you might as well start from scratch and create a new, homogenous, well-designed and modern ISA.

      • ksec 4 hours ago
        There are software compiled today without using MMX support. I was thinking the idea of something that is open or for licensing is an 86 ISA that is forward compatible. And for customers that requires strict backward compatibility they could still source it from AMD and Intel.

        i.e Software compiled for 86 should work on x86. The value for backward compatibility is kept with both Intel and AMD. If the market wants something in between they now have an option.

        I know this isn't a sexy idea because HN or most tech people like something shiny and new. But I have always like the idea of extracting value from the "old and tried" solutions.

        • Scoundreller 2 hours ago
          Sadly over the past year, Spotify builds require AVX extensions. Had an issue updating my 2008 Dell semi-upgraded bench PC that has a Q9300 in it (no AVX on it)

          But thankfully I could install an old bin and lock it out from updating.

          Intel’s software development emulator might run the newest bin but variable how slow it might be.

          In other circumstances, the AVX extensions aren’t required but the app is compiled to fail if they’re not required: https://www.reddit.com/r/pcgaming/comments/pix02j/hotfix_for...

      • fooker 6 hours ago
        Software or microcode emulation works pretty well.

        So it would be faster and more efficient when sticking to the new subset and Nx slower then using the emulation path.

        • kimixa 6 hours ago
          You could argue that microcode emulation is what they do now.
    • tester756 5 hours ago
      >I just wish AMD and Intel could work together and make a subset clean up of x86 ISA

      AMD and Intel Celebrate First Anniversary of x86 Ecosystem Advisory Group Driving the Future of x86 Computing

      Standardizing x86 features

      Key technical milestones, include:

          FRED (Flexible Return and Event Delivery): Finalized as a standard feature, FRED introduces a modernized interrupt model designed to reduce latency and improve system software reliability.
          AVX10: Established as the next-generation vector and general-purpose instruction set extension, AVX10 boosts throughput while ensuring portability across client, workstation, and server CPUs.
          ChkTag: x86 Memory Tagging: To combat longstanding memory safety vulnerabilities such as buffer overflows and use-after-free errors, the EAG introduced ChkTag, a unified memory tagging specification. ChkTag adds hardware instructions to detect violations, helping secure applications1, operating systems, hypervisors, and firmware. With compiler and tooling support, developers gain fine-grained control without compromising performance. Notably, ChkTag-enabled software remains compatible with processors lacking hardware support, simplifying deployment and complementing existing security features like shadow stack and confidential computing. The full ChkTag specification is expected later this year – and for further feature details, please visit the ChkTag Blog.
          ACE (Advanced Matrix Extensions for Matrix Multiplication): Accepted and implemented across the stack, ACE standardizes matrix multiplication capabilities, enabling seamless developer experiences across devices ranging from laptops to data center servers.
    • fulafel 6 hours ago
      90s x86 from ISA pov is already free to use, no? The original patents must have expired and there's no copyright protection of ISAs. The thing keeping the symbiotic cross-licensed duopoly going is mutating the ISA all the time so they can mix in more recently patented stuff.
      • tracker1 6 hours ago
        AFAIK, most of event x86_64 patents are largely expired, or will be within the next 6 years. That said, efforts for a more open platform are probably more likely to be centered around risc or another arm alternative than x86... While I could see a standardization of x86 compatible shortcuts for use with emulation platforms on arm/risc processors. Transmeta was an idea too far ahead of its time.
        • fulafel 6 hours ago
          Remembering the Mac ARM transition pain wrt Docker and Node/Python/Lambda cross builds targeting servers, there's a lot to be said for binary compatibility.
          • tracker1 4 hours ago
            You're doing builds for Docker on your desktop for direct deployment instead of through a CI/CD service?

            My biggest issue was the number of broken apps in Docker on Arm based Macs, and even then was mostly able to work around it without much trouble.

            • fulafel 4 hours ago
              You want to be able to replicate the build in your local dev env. And you're not always working on a mature project, you first get it working locally. CICD tends to be slow and hard to debug.
              • fweimer 3 hours ago
                Sure, but why does the developer environment have to be the same architecture as in production? Think of it as ahead-of-time binary translation if you want to.

                These days, even fairly low-level system software is surprisingly portable. Entire GNU/Linux distributions are developed this way, for the majority of architectures they support.

          • cmrdporcupine 5 hours ago
            90% of those problems effect people like you and I, developers and power users, not "regular" users of machines who are mostly mobile device and occasional laptop/desktop application users.

            I suspect we'll see somebody -- a phone manufacturer or similar device -- make a major transition to RISC-V from ARM etc in the next 10 years that we won't even notice.

            • fulafel 4 hours ago
              I agree, some will, but it may not be a more open platform from developer POV.
      • fweimer 3 hours ago
        I don't think it works that way in practice.

        Some distributions like Debian or Fedora will make newer features (such as AVX/VEX) mandatory only after the patents expire, if ever. So a new entrant could implement the original x86-64 ISA (maybe with some obvious extensions like 128-bit atomics) in that time frame and preempt the patent-based lockout due to ISA evolution. If there was a viable AMD/Intel alternative that only implements the baseline ISA, those distributions would never switch away from it.

        It's just not easy to build high-performance CPUs, regardless of ISA.

    • lloydatkinson 7 hours ago
      They recently killed off their recent attempt; x86s.
      • userbinator 1 hour ago
        The "s" stands for "stupid".

        But it's fortunate that they realised the main attraction to x86 is backwards-compatibility, so attempting to do away with that will lead to even less marketshare.

      • tester756 5 hours ago
        Wut?

        >AMD and Intel Celebrate First Anniversary of x86 Ecosystem Advisory Group Driving the Future of x86 Computing

        Oct 13, 2025

        Standardizing x86 features

        Key technical milestones, include:

            FRED (Flexible Return and Event Delivery): Finalized as a standard feature, FRED introduces a modernized interrupt model designed to reduce latency and improve system software reliability.
        
            AVX10: Established as the next-generation vector and general-purpose instruction set extension, AVX10 boosts throughput while ensuring portability across client, workstation, and server CPUs.
        
            ChkTag: x86 Memory Tagging: To combat longstanding memory safety vulnerabilities such as buffer overflows and use-after-free errors, the EAG introduced ChkTag, a unified memory tagging specification. ChkTag adds hardware instructions to detect violations, helping secure applications1, operating systems, hypervisors, and firmware. With compiler and tooling support, developers gain fine-grained control without compromising performance. Notably, ChkTag-enabled software remains compatible with processors lacking hardware support, simplifying deployment and complementing existing security features like shadow stack and confidential computing. The full ChkTag specification is expected later this year – and for further feature details, please visit the ChkTag Blog.
        
            ACE (Advanced Matrix Extensions for Matrix Multiplication): Accepted and implemented across the stack, ACE standardizes matrix multiplication capabilities, enabling seamless developer experiences across devices ranging from laptops to data center servers.
        • wtallis 4 hours ago
          Copying and pasting a press release does not make for a good comment. Especially because you don't seem to have understood what you pasted in, or the context of this discussion. What you're demonstrating is several more new features added to the pile. Intel's retracted X86S proposal was actually about removing legacy features, creating a cleaner subset for the modern era.
          • tester756 4 hours ago
            Both x86S and advisory group is about the same: improving x86.

            As of today it resulted in more features, but who knows what changes it will bring tomorrow?

            Calling x86 clean up initiative dead/cancelled is quite not fair since this group is still working.

          • ksec 4 hours ago
            Hi Wtallis, any insight as to why they abandoned the idea? I was looking forward to x86s and may be even reshaping some of the x86-64 instructions. But looks like that is largely gone as well.
    • IshKebab 6 hours ago
      Far too late for that. Does anyone seriously think ARM isn't going to obliterate x86 in the next 10-20 years?
      • Keyframe 5 hours ago
        In which space? Desktop and high performance servers? Why would it?

        Mature gallery of software to be ported from TSO to weak memory model is a soft moat. So is avx/simd mature dominance vs neon/sve. x86/64 is a duopoly and a stable target vs fragmented landscape of ARM. ARM's whole spiel is performance per watt, scale out type of thing vs scale up. In that sense the market has kind of already moved. With ARM if you start pushing for sustained high throughput, high performance, 5Ghz+ envelope, all the advantages are gone in favor of x86 so far.

        What might be interesting is if let's say AMD adds an ARM frontend decoder to Zen. In one of Jim Keller's interviews that was shared here, he said it wouldn't be that big of a deal to make such a CPU for it to be an ARM decoding one. That'd be interesting to see.

        • philistine 5 hours ago
          > In which space? Desktop and high performance servers? Why would it?

          Laptops. Apple already owned the high margin laptop market before they switched to ARM. With phones, tablets, laptops above 1k, and all the other doodads all running ARM, it's not that x86 will simply disappear. Of course not. But the investments simply aren't comparable anymore with ARM being an order of magnitude more common. x86 is very slowly losing steam, with their chips generally behind in terms of performance per watt. And it's not because of any specific problem or mistake. It's just that it no longer makes economic sense.

      • tracker1 6 hours ago
        Well, given some of the political/legal gamesmanship over the company itself the past few years, it could very well self destruct in favor of RISC-V or something else entirely in the next decade, who knows.
      • fulafel 6 hours ago
        Look how long SPARC, z/Architecture, PowerPC etc have kept going even after they lost their strong positions on the market (a development which is nowhere in sight for x86), and they had a tiny fraction of the inertia of x86 softare base.

        Obliterating x86 in that time would take quite a lot more than what the ARM trajectory is now. It's had 40 years to try by now and the technical advantage window (power efficieny advantage) has closed.

        • IshKebab 40 minutes ago
          To be clear if x86 is ever as unpopular as SPARC or PowerPC I would consider that to be obliterated.

          I was thinking more like if it falls to 10% of desktop/laptop/server market share, which is still waaaaaay more then the nearly-dead architectures you listed.

      • fweimer 3 hours ago
        It seems to me that interest in AArch64 for on-promise general-purpose compute workloads has largely waned. Are Dell/HPE/Lenovo currently selling AArch64 servers? Maybe there is a rack-mounted Nvidia DGX variant, but that's more focused on GPU compute for sure.
      • tester756 4 hours ago
        >Does anyone seriously think ARM isn't going to obliterate x86 in the next 10-20 years?

        Lunar Lake shows that x86 is capable of getting that energy efficiency

        Panther Lake that will be released in around 30 days is expected to show significant improvement over Lunar Lake

        So... why switch to ARM if you will get similar perf/energy eff?

      • izacus 6 hours ago
        20 years is half of x86's lifetime and less than half of the lifetime of home computing as we know it.

        So this is kind of a useless question, because in such a timespan anything can happen. 20 years ago computers had somewhere around 512MB of RAM and a single core and had a CRT on desk.

      • zzzoom 5 hours ago
        Why would the market jump from one proprietary ISA to another proprietary ISA?
        • IshKebab 5 hours ago
          Ask Apple.
          • zzzoom 5 hours ago
            Apple's A4 was launched 4 years before RISC-V.
  • bhasi 4 hours ago
    “Behind every successful fortune there is a crime.”

    - Mario Puzo, The Godfather

  • startupsfail 6 hours ago
    Seems like an interesting story, Ashawna - she was about 25 at the time, and as per Wikipedia, already worked on the military projects - the Sprint Missile System, and was at Xerox.

    > The processor was reverse-engineered by Ashawna Hailey, Kim Hailey and Jay Kumar. The Haileys photographed a pre-production sample Intel 8080 on their last day in Xerox, and developed a schematic and logic diagrams from the ~400 images.

  • htrp 5 hours ago
    > Am9080 variants ran at up to 4.0 MHz

    Definitely read that wrong the first time I skimmed the article

  • B1FF_PSUVM 4 hours ago
    AMD was already in the CPU market with bit-slice LSI chips, the Am2900 set of chips: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD_Am2900

    Those worked in 4-bit slices, and you could use them as LEGO blocks to build your own design (e.g. 8, 12 ou 16 bits) with much fewer parts than using standard TTL gates (or ECL NANDs, if you were Seymour Cray).

    The 1980 Mick & Brick book Bit-slice Microprocessor Design later gathered together some "application notes" - the cookbooks/crib sheets that semiconductor companies wrote and provided to get buyers/engineers started after the spec sheets.

  • ck2 3 hours ago
    ah I remember those amazing days

    instant 20% speed boost replacing the IBM 8088 with the v20 chip

    bought a sleeve of them cheap and went around to all the PCs and popped them out

    only problem was software that relied on clocks ran too fast

  • FridayoLeary 3 hours ago
    >In 1975, AMD could make these processors for 50 cents and sell them for $700.

    Apparently by ripping off their military customers.

    >says Wikipedia.

    Why is that a primary source?