Intel Reveals More Larrabee Architecture Details
Ninjakicks writes "Intel is presenting a paper at the SIGGRAPH 2008 industry conference in
Los Angeles on Aug. 12 that describes features and capabilities of its
first-ever forthcoming many-core architecture, codenamed Larrabee.
Details unveiled in the SIGGRAPH paper include a new approach to the
software rendering 3-D pipeline, a many-core programming model and
performance analysis for several applications. Initial product
implementations of the Larrabee architecture will target discrete graphics
applications, support DirectX and OpenGL, and run existing games and programs.
Additionally, a broad potential range of highly parallel applications including
scientific and engineering software will benefit from the Larrabee native C/C++
programming model."
With the supposed death of Usenet, the closing of PARC, and the general Facebookification of the Internet, its nice to see a bunch of nerds get together and geek out simply for the sake of it.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
With more and more emphasis going toward GPUs and other specialized processors, I wonder if this is to try to fight that trend and have Intel processors able to handle the whole computer again.
This is good news for Mac mini and MacBook users.
How so? Has Apple announced that it will adopt Larrabee for the Mac Mini or the MacBook? No. All you have are rumors and speculation by MacRumors and Ars Technica. When Apple says they will adopt the Larrabee GPU, then you can say that it is good news for Mac users of any stripe. Until then, it's just Intel news, not Apple news.
My blog
Is it not also good news for Windows users, Linux users, and *BSD users? I mean, it's likely that these OSes will also be made to make use of Larrabee when the technology is released, right? Yet, it's not news for any of those platforms or Apple users unless/until those platforms are able to make use of the new GPU technology. Everything else is just speculation, especially so for Apple, who might easily decide not use Larrabee. Since Apple is the only legit supplier of Mac OS X hardware, it's definitely not news for Apple users until Apple says it is. OTOH, Windows, Linux and *BSD users can get their hardware from any supplier.
My blog
I think Larrabee is quite believable. They are quoting performance number that make sense and a power consumption of 300W. The only unbelievable idea is that a component that draws 300W is a mass-market part in an era when computers that draw over 100W total are increasingly uncommon and handhelds (including mobile phones) are the majority of all computer sales with laptops coming in second and desktops third.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
Your comment, "... as they're already big on integrated graphics." is true for some values of "big". Intel has been big in integrated graphics the way a dead whale is big on the beach.
Basically, once you discover what Intel graphics has not been able to do, you buy an ATI or Nvidia graphics card.
This is SIGGRAPH. They've been having the 'ray tracing versus rasterisation' debate for about three decades there. If you put anything definitive into your paper then you are likely to get a reviewer who is in the other camp, and get your paper rejected. If you say 'speeds up all graphics techniques and even some non-graphics ones' then all of your reviewers will be happy.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News