BEIJING----Intel Corporation executives today detailed more than 20 new products,
technology innovations and industry initiatives -- many of them industry
firsts -- aimed at making the World Wide Web, computers and consumer
electronics devices much more responsive, friendlier and secure.
Under the backdrop of Intel’s leadership in
45nm Hi-k metal gate silicon technology and how it will ignite new
innovation and growth opportunities, Intel executives at the Intel
Developer Forum disclosed new performance details for its
next-generation “Penryn”
processor family. The company also unveiled two product roadmaps for
Intel architecture IA-based System on Chip SOC consumer electronic
CE devices and business uses.
“Welcome to the era of multicore, an era in
which all of our computing capabilities will multiply our own personal
capabilities,” said Justin R. Rattner, Intel’s
chief technology officer. “This Beijing
developer forum will show how our multiple innovations go hand in hand
with evolutions in social networking, PC and TV entertainment, online
commerce and other growing demands on the Internet. Today, Intel is
delivering a breadth of multicore processors worldwide and a product
roadmap providing the incredible performance boost and energy efficiency
needed to put the consumer more in control of the information age.”
The IDF is being held for the first time in Beijing. Last month, Intel
announced plans to invest $2.5 billion to build China’s
first 300mm wafer fabrication facility in the city of Dalian.
Multicore Performance Era, Core Microarchitecture
Gelsinger provided performance indicators for Intel's upcoming Penryn
family of processors. For desktop PCs, he said to expect increases of
about 15 percent for imaging-related applications; 25 percent for 3-D
rendering; more than 40 percent for gaming; and more than 40 percent
faster video encoding with Intel SSE4 optimized video encoders. The
indicators were based on pre-production 45nm Hi-k Intel®
quad core processor running at 3.33 Gigahertz GHz with a 1333
Megahertz MHz front side bus FSB and 12MB cache versus an Intel®
Core™ 2 Extreme processor QX6800 introduced
last week at 2.93 GHz with 1066 FSB and 8MB cache.
For high-performance computing HPC and workstation systems, Gelsinger
said to expect gains up to an estimated 45 percent for bandwidth
intensive applications; and a 25 percent increase for servers using Java1.
These indicators were derived from pre-production 45nm Hi-k Intel®
Xeon® processors with 1600 MHz front side bus
for workstation and HPC, and a 1333 MHz front side bus for servers
versus today’s quad-core Intel®
Xeon® X5355 processors.
Gelsinger said that Intel has begun planning products based on a highly
parallel, IA-based programmable architecture codenamed “Larrabee.”
It will be easily programmable using many existing software tools, and
designed to scale to trillions of floating point operations per second
Teraflops of performance. The Larrabee architecture will include
enhancements to accelerate applications such as scientific computing,
recognition, mining, synthesis, visualization, financial analytics and
health applications.
The company also has plans for Intel®
QuickAssist Technology – a comprehensive
initiative to optimize the use of accelerators in servers. Accelerators
increase the performance of a single function, like security encryption
or financial computation, while reducing power consumption. This
initiative includes support for acceleration using IA-based multi-core
processors and third party accelerators working together in Intel-based
servers, and developing new integrated accelerators inside the IA-based
processor itself.
Gelsinger unveiled “Tolapai”
plans, the first in what will be a family of enterprise-class
"system-on-chip" SoC products that integrate several key system
components into a single Intel architecture-based processor. The 2008
Tolapai product is expected to reduce the chip sizes by up to 45 percent
and power consumption by approximately 20 percent compared to a standard
four-chip design2, while improving throughput
performance and processor efficiency. Tolapai will include the new Intel®
QuickAssist Integrated Accelerator technology.
Gelsinger also outlined product plans, including one for Intel’s
high-end multi-processor servers codenamed “Caneland”.
The quad- and dual-core Intel Xeon® processor
7300 series will arrive in the third quarter in 80- and 50-watt versions
for blades. The new servers will complete the company’s
transition to its Intel® Core™
microarchitecture for Xeon processors. Sun Microsystems demonstrated its
Solaris operating system running on an Intel Xeon®
5100 series processor based system using Intel Dynamic Power technology,
a new capability focused on reducing the power required for a memory
subsystem.
Further bolstering PC security and manageability benefits, Intel will
introduce the next-generation Intel® vPro™
processor technology, codenamed “Weybridge,”
in the second half of the year and using the new Intel®
3 Series Chipset family, formerly codenamed “Bear
Lake.”
This will follow the launch of Intel® Centrino™
Pro processor technology, bringing the business-centric features of vPro
systems to notebooks for the first time.
Finally, Microsoft demonstrated Windows1 Server
code name "Longhorn" and two complementary technologies: Windows Server
Core, and its new hypervisor-based virtualization solution, Windows
Server virtualization, running on the Intel quad-core Xeon processors.
The integrated platform combination, demonstrates running up to 8 core
virtual machines, with "hot add" features, delivering increased
efficiency and uptime for IT managers.
Home PCs, Consumer Electronics Innovation
Also at IDF, Eric Kim, senior vice president and general manager of Intel’s
Digital Home Group, said Intel is focused on developing products and
technologies that provide consumers with greater control, choice,
clarity and community – the “4C’s”
– across computers and CE platforms spanning
PCs, laptops, televisions, set-top-boxes and other networked media
players.
Kim detailed Intel’s strategy to deliver a
common, unified IA-based processor foundation across PC and CE
platforms. He said the Intel® CE 2110 Media
Processor, a system-on-a-chip SoC architecture for CE devices will
help manufacturers accelerate time to market for smarter, more
cost-effective designs that provide necessary performance, flexibility
and headroom. Kim said the company will deliver its first CE-optimized
IA-based SoC in 2008.
Intel also plans to deliver a number of desktop computer products later
this year, including updates to its Intel®
Viiv™ processor technology roadmap, and a new
high-end enthusiast and gaming platform codenamed “Skulltrail.”
Future generations of Intel Viiv processor technology will be based on
the Intel® 3 Series Chipset family arriving
this quarter and delivering improved graphics support with features such
as enhanced Intel® Clear Video Technology and
hardware support for Microsoft1 DX10 for
smoother high-definition playback and 3D visuals. Intel 3 Series
Chipsets also boost system performance with a faster 1333 MHz front side
bus and support for DDR3 memory, PCI Express1
2.0 and Intel® Turbo Memory for application
acceleration and faster boot times.
Intel R&D Sets Course For Innovation
In his opening address, Rattner reiterated the company’s
goals for processor performance and energy efficiency noting that Intel
will be able to drive down power consumption by a factor of 10 for the
ultra mobile computing segment by 2010. Intel will also create future
processors at Teraflops speeds, and Rattner urged the industry to work
together to take advantage of this raw processing power. The next stage
of Intel’s tera-scale research will be around “stacked”
memory on top of the 80-core research chip Intel demonstrated earlier
this year.
About Intel
Intel, the world leader in silicon innovation, develops technologies,
products and initiatives to continually advance how people work and
live. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom.
Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of
Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other
countries.
1 Other names and brands may be claimed as the
property of others.
2 Performance tests and ratings are measured
using specific computer systems and/or components and reflect the
approximate performance of Intel products as measured by those tests.
Any difference in system hardware or software design or configuration
may affect actual performance. For more information on performance tests
and on the performance of Intel products, visit http://www.intel.com/performance/resources/limits.htm
or call U.S. 1-800-628-8686 or 1-916-356-3104.
NOTE: More photos, video highlights and news fact sheets are at www.intel.com/pressroom.