Multi-Core Goes Mainstream, Computing Pushed to Extremes
The Future Accelerated: Multi-Core Goes Mainstream, Computing Pushed to Extremes
NEWS
HIGHLIGHTS
• New “Near Threshold Voltage Processor”
from Intel Labs challenges the computing system status quo
with an experimental Pentium®-class Intel® architecture
CPU delivering five times the energy efficiency and the
ability to run off a solar cell the size of a postage stamp.
• Intel Labs released a “Parallel JS” engine to the open
source community, adding data-parallel capabilities to
JavaScript™ to speed up browser-based services such as
computer vision, cryptography and 3-D games by up to
8-fold.
• Intel Labs unveiled the Hybrid Memory Cube with 7-times better
energy efficiency than today’s DDR3 memory along with the
highest data rates ever seen in a single DRAM
device.
• Intel CTO Justin Rattner highlighted the
accelerating impact of multi- and many-core computing,
expanding beyond HPC with developers solving a wide range of
everyday computing problems on both clients and
servers.
San Francisco, 16 September 2011 – Citing the impact of multi- and many-core computing hitting the mainstream and new developments in extreme scale computing as examples, Justin Rattner, Intel’s chief technology officer, told an Intel Developer Forum audience that the future of computing is being accelerated.
“Since 2006 Intel and the IA developer community have worked in partnership to realise the potential of multi- and many-core computing, with accelerating impact beyond high-performance computing to solving a wide range of real-world computing problems on clients and servers,” Rattner said during his Day 3 keynote in San Francisco. “What we have demonstrated today only scratches the surface of what will be possible with many-core and extreme scale computing systems in the future.”
Computing to the Extreme
Intel
continues to push tech beyond today’s limits, looking for
the next big leaps that take computing to the next levels of
performance with much less power consumption than is
possible today. As an example, Rattner demonstrated a Near-Threshold Voltage Processor using
novel, ultra-low voltage circuits that dramatically reduce
energy consumption by operating close to threshold, or
turn-on voltage, of the transistors. This concept CPU runs
fast when needed but drops power to below 10 milliwatts when
its workload is light – low enough to keep running while
powered only by a solar cell the size of a postage stamp.
While the research chip will not become a product itself,
the results of this research could lead to the integration
of scalable near-threshold voltage circuits across a wide
range of future products, reducing power consumption by
5-fold or more and extending always-on capability to a wider
range of computing devices. Technologies such as this will
further Intel Labs’ goal to reduce energy consumption per
computation by 100- to1000-fold for applications ranging
from massive data processing at one end of the spectrum to
terascale-in-a-pocket at the other.
The Hybrid Memory Cube, a concept DRAM developed by Micron* in collaboration with Intel, demonstrates a new approach to memory design delivering a 7-fold improvement in energy-efficiency over today’s DDR3. Hybrid Memory Cube uses a stacked memory chip configuration, forming a compact “cube,” and uses a new, highly efficient memory interface which sets the bar for energy consumed per bit transferred while supporting data rates of one trillion bits per second. This research could lead to dramatic improvements in servers optimised for cloud computing as well as ultrabooks, televisions, tablets and smartphones.
Multi-core’s Many
Uses
Multi-core, the practice of building more than
one processing engine into a single chip, has become the
accepted method to increase performance while keeping power
consumption low. While many-core is more of a design
perspective, rather than incrementally adding cores in a
traditional approach, it’s reinventing chip design based
on the assumption that high core counts is the new
norm.
Rattner highlighted the progress multi-core computing has seen since he introduced Intel’s first dual-core processor at IDF 5 years ago. Today Intel’s multi- and many-core processors are hosting a myriad of important applications across a wide range of industry sectors, including some surprising new uses in the rapidly advancing world of high-core-count computing.
Rattner
described some of the latest applications of this technology
along with the software tools and programming techniques
that are enabling developers to harness the power of multi-
and many-core computing in several key areas,
including:
• Faster Web Apps: Extending
JavaScript™ with data-parallel programming features, using
a just-released experimental Parallel JS open-source engine from
Intel Labs, to enable a new class of browser-based apps in
domains such as photo and video editing, physics simulation
and 3-D gaming for desktop and mobile personal computers,
including Ultrabooks™.
• More Responsive Cloud
Services: Best-in-class increases in queries per second
for Memcached applications using the multi-core capabilities
of Intel’s 2nd Generation Intel® Core™ microprocessor
to enable the world’s largest Internet sites to improve
their Web app responsiveness and minimise user wait times
for critical data.
• Improved PC Client
Security: Parallel cryptographic and facial recognition
services to improve security on Ultrabooks and traditional
notebook and desktop personal computers by utilising all of
the IA and graphics cores on 2nd Generation Intel Core
microprocessors in a heterogeneous fashion.
• Lower
Cost Wireless Infrastructure: Collaborative research
with China Mobile to replace the custom and costly
base-station hardware used on cell towers today with a fully
programmable and far more cost-effective, software-based PC
alternative.
• Really Big Science: Unlocking the
mysteries of the universe by utilising clusters of Intel
multi-core processors at CERN* to greatly improve their
high-energy physics app performance and to quickly port
their code to Intel’s upcoming Many Integrated Core (MIC)
architecture product family.
About Intel
Intel
(NASDAQ: INTC) is a world leader in computing innovation.
The company designs and builds the essential technologies
that serve as the foundation for the world’s computing
devices. Additional information about Intel is available at
newsroom.intel.com and blogs.intel.com.
Photos, videos and more facts available at www.intel.com/newsroom/idf
ENDS