Intel Develops Tera-Scale Research Chips
Experimental Chips Could Bring TeraFLOP Performance,
Terabytes of Bandwidth into Wide Use in Future Computers and Data Centers
INTEL DEVELOPER FORUM, San Francisco, Sept. 26, 2006 – Intel Corporation today described the significant technical challenges that need to be addressed if computing, from personal devices to giant data centers, is to keep up with increasing demand by consumers and businesses for Internet-based software, services and media-rich experiences.
In a speech today at the
Intel Developer Forum, Intel Senior Fellow and Chief Technology Officer
Justin Rattner said that during the next decade online software services,
hosted by mega data centers with more than a million servers, will allow
people to access personal data, media and applications from any
high-performance device to play photo-realistic games, share real-time video
and do multimedia data mining. This new usage model will challenge the
industry to deliver the one trillion floating-point operations-per-second (teraFLOPs)
of performance and terabytes of bandwidth.
“The rise of mega data
centers and the need for high-performance personal devices will require the
industry to innovate at every level, from many-core processors to
higher-speed communications between systems, while delivering better
security and energy efficiency,” said Rattner. “Solving these challenges
will bring benefits to all computing devices while creating new markets and
opportunities for developers and systems designers.”
Tera-Scale Research Prototype Chips
Rattner outlined the importance of three major
silicon breakthroughs. He started by revealing the first details of Intel’s
tera-scale research prototype silicon, the world’s first programmable
TeraFLOP processor. Containing 80 simple cores and operating at 3.1 GHz, the
goal of this experimental chip is to test interconnect strategies for
rapidly moving terabytes of data from core to core and between cores and
memory.
“When combined with
our recent breakthroughs in silicon photonics, these experimental chips
address the three major requirements for tera-scale computing – teraOPS of
performance, terabytes-per-second of memory bandwidth, and
terabits-per-second of I/O capacity,” said Rattner. “While any commercial
application of these technologies is years away, it is an exciting first
step in bringing tera-scale performance to PCs and servers.”
Unlike existing chip designs
where hundreds of millions of transistors are uniquely arranged, this chip’s
design consists of 80 tiles laid out in an 8x10 block array. Each tile
includes a small core, or compute element, with a simple instruction set for
processing floating-point data, but is not Intel Architecture compatible.
The tile also includes a router connecting the core to an on-chip network
that links all the cores to each other and gives them access to memory.
The second major innovation
is a 20 megabyte SRAM memory chip that is stacked on and bonded to the
processor die. Stacking the die makes possible thousands of interconnects
and provides more than a terabyte-per-second of bandwidth between memory and
the cores.
Rattner demonstrated a third
major innovation, the recently announced Hybrid Silicon Laser chip developed
in collaboration with researchers at University of California, Santa
Barbara. With this breakthrough, dozens or maybe hundreds of Hybrid Silicon
Lasers could be integrated with other silicon photonic components onto a
single silicon chip. This could lead to a terabit-per-second optical link
capable of speeding terabytes of data between chips inside computers,
between PCs, and between servers inside data centers.
Intel will
work closely with the industry – original equipment manufacturers,
independent software vendors and developers – on a number of fronts to make
this vision of tera-scale computing a reality and to bring better, more
intelligent products to people around the world that are useful to them
where they live. More information on these developments and tera-scale
computing research can be found at
www.intel.com/go/terascale.
About the Intel Developer Forum
IDF, now in its 10th
year, is the premier global technology forum for hardware and software
developers to confer on Intel-based platforms, technologies and solutions,
and the new usage models they enable. Visit
www.intel.com/idf
for more information.
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