February 11, 2007 12:00 PM PST

Intel shows off 80-core processor

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Intel has built its 80-core processor as part of a research project, but don't expect it to boost your Doom score just yet.

Chief Technical Officer Justin Rattner demonstrated the processor in San Francisco last week for a group of reporters, and the company will present a paper on the project during the International Solid State Circuits Conference in the city this week.

The chip is capable of producing 1 trillion floating-point operations per second, known as a teraflop. That's a level of performance that required 2,500 square feet of large computers a decade ago.

Intel first disclosed it had built a prototype 80-core processor during last fall's Intel Developer Forum, when CEO Paul Otellini promised to deliver the chip within five years. The company's researchers have several hurdles to overcome before PCs and servers come with 80-core processors--such as how to connect the chip to memory and how to teach software developers to write programs for it--but the research chip is an important step, Rattner said.

intel80core

A company called ClearSpeed has put 96 cores on a single chip. ClearSpeed's chips are used as co-processors with supercomputers that require a powerful chip for a very specific purpose.

Intel's research chip has 80 cores, or "tiles," Rattner said. Each tile has a computing element and a router, allowing it to crunch data individually and transport that data to neighboring tiles.

Intel used 100 million transistors on the chip, which measures 275 millimeters squared. By comparison, its Core 2 Duo chip uses 291 million transistors and measures 143 millimeters squared. The chip was built using Intel's 65-nanometer manufacturing technology, but any likely product based on the design would probably use a future process based on smaller transistors. A chip the size of the current research chip is likely too large for cost-effective manufacturing.

The computing elements are very basic and do not use the x86 instruction set used by Intel and Advanced Micro Devices' chips, which means Windows Vista can't be run on the research chip. Instead, the chip uses a VLIW (very long instruction word) architecture, a simpler approach to computing than the x86 instruction set.

There's also no way at present to connect this chip to memory. Intel is working on a stacked memory chip that it could place on top of the research chip, and it's talking to memory companies about next-generation designs for memory chips, Rattner said.

Intel's researchers will then have to figure out how to create general-purpose processing cores that can handle the wide variety of applications in the world. The company is still looking at a five-year timeframe for product delivery, Rattner said.

But the primary challenge for an 80-core chip will be figuring out how to write software that can take advantage of all that horsepower. The PC software community is just starting to get its hands around multicore programming, although its server counterparts are a little further ahead. Still, Microsoft, Apple and the Linux community have a long way to go before they'll be able to effectively utilize 80 individual processing units with their PC operating systems.

"The operating system has the most control over the CPU, and it's got to change," said Jim McGregor, an analyst at In-Stat. "It has to be more intelligent about breaking things up," he said, referring to how tasks are divided among multiple processing cores.

"I think we're sort of all moving forward here together," Rattner said. "As the core count grows and people get the skills to use them effectively, these applications will come." Intel hopes to make it easier by training its army of software developers on creating tools and libraries, he said.

Intel demonstrated the chip running an application created for solving differential equations. At 3.16GHz and with 0.95 volts applied to the processor, it can hit 1 teraflop of performance while consuming 62 watts of power. Intel constructed a special motherboard and cooling system for the demonstration in a San Francisco hotel.

See more CNET content tagged:
VLIW, transistor, Intel, memory chip, Intel x86

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 38 comments (Showing first 20 comments)
Click to view?
by mrorie February 11, 2007 12:46 PM PST
The "click to view" area of the page doesn't pop up to anything else, at least not in my copy of FF.
Reply to this comment View reply
multi threads
by billmosby February 11, 2007 12:49 PM PST
Apple will shortly make it quite a bit easier and more systematic for
programmers to incorporate multiple threads into their
applications. There will, of course, be applications which aren't
easily put into multi-threaded form, so it will not be easy for all
apps to take advantage of multicore processors.
Reply to this comment View all 3 replies
Good Thing Intel Has Partnered with Sun
by fitzgm3 February 11, 2007 1:53 PM PST
It is a good thing Intel and Sun announced their partnership recently. Solaris will have no problem scaling to 80 cores it has been scaling past 64 CPUs for almost 10 years now (and 144 CPUs for the past 2 or 3).
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Gold mine for microsoft
by GrandpaN1947 February 11, 2007 6:33 PM PST
80 cores, a copy of Windows is only good for 2 cores. That means you would need to buy 40 copies of Windows to get the full functionality from the cores. At approximately $250 per copy, that would be $10,000.00 just for the OS.
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Just goes to show....
by momule February 11, 2007 8:11 PM PST
that our puter life will be in a constant state of flux forever.....just as it has been from the gitgo. I do remember my first computer and the salesguy telling me that I would probably not need the optional 20MB hard drive or a processor larger than a 286 even though the 386 was being developed. Then I bought Kings Quest 1 and it used most of that real estate. At the time my mom had been playing with a Texas Instruments machine using a cassette tape as data storage and trying to play primitive pong games and then upgraded to a IBM with an 8086 processor and was trying to run AOL 1.0 . So,the lesson is: hang onto your seats my friends.
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Solaris EatsThreads for Breaskfast
by BreakfastThreads February 11, 2007 8:30 PM PST
Why no mention of it in your article when referring to operating systems? Unlike Windows, OS 10 and Linux (which you do mention) Solaris does a great job of passing instructions to multiple cores.

A mention at least seems appropriate especially given Intel's recent Solaris deal with Sun.
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Each malware/spyware app gets it's own core
by bobby_brady February 11, 2007 9:57 PM PST
eom
Reply to this comment View reply
intel
by darix2005 February 11, 2007 11:13 PM PST
impressive

---
http://mortgage.emigrantas.com - mortgage blog
Reply to this comment
Software Radio OS
by cyclotron February 12, 2007 1:50 AM PST
it strikes me that the (JTRS) SCA type Operating System is
processor/core agnostic and likes a heterogenous processing
environment. I think these Software Radio Operating Systems are
quite likely to hit the desktop in 2009+ on this sort of multi-core
CPU! (also check out the Intel "Larrabee" CGPU!) I'll have to brush
up on my Corba and Dcom and Core Framework , maybe tryout
FreeRTOS or Integrity on one of the Intel systems?
Reply to this comment
Software for terascale computing: Take One
by EmilioB February 12, 2007 7:39 AM PST
Pervasive DataRush can't wait for the 80-core chip to be ready for ISV testing !!

Get ready. Start learning hyper-parallel application development NOW:

http://www.pervasivedatarush.com/
Reply to this comment
Yes, an scaling OLTP way different than...
by EmilioB February 12, 2007 7:43 AM PST
...scaling data processing applications.

It's time for http://www.pervasivedatarush.com/ to hit Sun's lineup.

Gee, I wonder what 200,000,000 lines of single-threaded COBOL code will do on a terascale chip ?? Answer: Nothing more than 1 core.
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Forget "Doom"... it'd be my personal render farm!
by Penguinisto February 12, 2007 1:31 PM PST
...It would be hella nice to be able to take an animation render job (or even a still carved into sectors) and let each core chew away on it's bit of the final CG artwork... Instead of waiting a zillion minutes for a average high-end render, you could rack it out in seconds (or perhaps even show the final raytrace and render in real-time, right there...

/P
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Here comes the licensing fees
by sanenazok February 12, 2007 5:10 PM PST
Let's see, $200/processor for Windows=$16,000 I guess they'll need a different model for licensing as well...
Reply to this comment View reply
Potential
by SiXiam February 12, 2007 10:00 PM PST
I have heard a lot of back and forth on this talkback today, but...

This processor is amazing and the Intel engineers deserve recognition for such work. If Intel continues AMD will be of little threat in 5 years time.

So....
Amd, get to work and show us all something so cool it will blow our minds (read: 100 Terra Flop CPU)....
Reply to this comment
They have been talking about multi-core licensing for a while
by davidmec February 14, 2007 7:59 AM PST
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/news/37432.html
Reply to this comment
They have been talking about multi-core licensing for a while
by davidmec February 14, 2007 7:59 AM PST
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/news/37432.html
Reply to this comment
It won't be...
by genotypewriter April 19, 2007 4:59 PM PDT
a zillion times faster... c'mon! It's got only 80 cores! Even if each core is a bit faster than the market leading cores why do you think the scale up would be better than 80? :)
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