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Exponential took on a very ambitious challenge of designing a PowerPC [[microarchitecture]] from the ground up that could operate at extremely high clock frequency for the time - 533 MHz. Comparable chips at the time of Exponential founding were operating at only 50-75 MHz max. By [[1993]] the idea was backed by [[Apple]] and their CEO [[wikipedia:Michael Spindler|Michael Spindler]] which became the principal investor of the newly created company, [[exponential technology|Exponential]].
 
Exponential took on a very ambitious challenge of designing a PowerPC [[microarchitecture]] from the ground up that could operate at extremely high clock frequency for the time - 533 MHz. Comparable chips at the time of Exponential founding were operating at only 50-75 MHz max. By [[1993]] the idea was backed by [[Apple]] and their CEO [[wikipedia:Michael Spindler|Michael Spindler]] which became the principal investor of the newly created company, [[exponential technology|Exponential]].
  
In [[1994]] [[Apple]] and Exponential signed a joint development agreement and later that year they formed an agreement with [[Hitachi]] which agreed to manufacture their chip at their [[BiCMOS]] foundry. By [[1996]] with their chip just months away from [[engineering sample]], Apple's CEO, then [[wikipedia:Gil Amelio|Gil Amelio]] extended their agreement to gain exclusive rights to the chip for the first nine months of [[volume production]]. The deal included a $5 million prepayment - a payment Apple never delivered.  
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In [[1994]] [[Apple]] and Exponential signed a juint development agreement and later that year they formed an agreement with [[Hitachi]] which agreed to manufacture their chip at their [[BiCMOS]] foundry. By [[1996]] with their chip just months away from [[engineering sample]], Apple's CEO, then [[wikipedia:Gil Amelio|Gil Amelio]] extended their agreement to gain exclusive rights to the chip for the first nine months of [[volume production]]. The deal included a $5 million prepayment - a payment Apple never delivered.  
  
 
First samples of the X704 came back running at only 410 MHz, 88% of the expected speed (or 75% of the top tier model). Exponential attributed the issue to a bug in their custom design tools. This pushed back the deliver date to March of [[1997]]. Even then, the chip would have been considerably faster than the fastest chips on the market at the time - Intel's {{intel|Pentium II|Klamath}} which ran as high as 233 MHz.
 
First samples of the X704 came back running at only 410 MHz, 88% of the expected speed (or 75% of the top tier model). Exponential attributed the issue to a bug in their custom design tools. This pushed back the deliver date to March of [[1997]]. Even then, the chip would have been considerably faster than the fastest chips on the market at the time - Intel's {{intel|Pentium II|Klamath}} which ran as high as 233 MHz.

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designerExponential Technology +
first announcedOctober 21, 1996 +
full page nameexponential technology/x704 +
instance ofmicroprocessor family +
instruction set architecturePowerPC +
main designerExponential Technology +
manufacturerHitachi +
microarchitectureX704 +
nameX704 +
packageCBGA-359 +
process500 nm (0.5 μm, 5.0e-4 mm) +
technologyBiCMOS +
word size32 bit (4 octets, 8 nibbles) +