Monday, October 13, 2008

Intel details PC graphics-aimed 'Larrabee'


Intel said its first Larrabee-based product, not expected until next year or 2010, will target the PC graphics market and will be what the company said is the industry’s first many-core x86 Intel architecture. The company also expects Larrabee to spur efforts to create and optimize software for the dozens, hundreds and thousands of cores that will power computers in the future.

Santa Clara, Calif-based chip giant Intel Corp will present a paper at the Siggraph 2008 conference being held next week in Los Angeles that details features and capabilities for its forthcoming multi-core “Larrabee” architecture which includes a new approach to the software rendering 3-D pipeline, a many-core programming model and performance analysis for several applications.

The chip giant reminded that it has a number of internal teams, projects and software-related efforts underway to speed the transition to multi-core, with its tera-scale research program garnering the single largest investment in its technology research and has partnered with more than 400 universities, DARPA and companies such as Microsoft and HP to move the industry in this direction. Initial product implementations of the Larrabee architecture (an overview drawing of which is pictured below) will target discrete graphics applications, support DirectX and OpenGL, run existing games and programs, and support a range of highly parallel applications including scientific and engineering software that will benefit from the Larrabee native C/C++ programming model, Intel continued.

Further, the Larrabee architecture has a pipeline derived from the dual-issue Intel Pentium processor, which uses a short execution pipeline with a fully coherent cache structure in order to allow enhancements such as a wide vector processing unit (VPU), multi-threading, 64-bit extensions and pre-fetching, which should allow a massive increase in available computational power combined with the familiarity and ease of programming of the Intel architecture, the company explained.

Original Article

No comments: