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05-03-22 07:25:08 AM
Jul - Computers and Technology - Scottish Researchers Claim 1000-Core Processor New poll - New thread - New reply
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FieryIce

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Posted on 01-06-11 02:18:12 AM Link | Quote
This is pretty sweet!


Researchers at a Scottish university claim to have made a breakthrough in the drive towards more powerful processors while conserving energy too. The team, from Glasgow University, led by Dr Wim Vanderbauwhede, have succeeded in squeezing 1000 cores on a single chip.

The researchers, working in conjunction with colleagues from University of Massachusetts, Lowell, used a chip called a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) which can be configured into specific circuits by the user rather than relying on the factory settings. This technology allowed Dr Vanderbauwhede to divide up the transistors within the chip into small groups and ask each to perform a different task thus creating 1000 mini-circuits -- or to put it another way, creating a 1000-core processor.

To demonstrate the chip's effectiveness, the research team used it to process an MPEG algorithm at a speed of 5Gbps, about 20 times faster than processors used in current PCs.

Dr Vanderbauwhede, who hopes to present his research at the International Symposium on Applied Reconfigurable Computing in March, said: "FPGAs are not used within standard computers because they are fairly difficult to program, but their processing power is huge while their energy consumption is very small because they are so much quicker - so they are also a greener option.

However, he warned that the research was an early proof-of-concept work but added that he hoped "to demonstrate a convenient way to program FPGAs so that their potential to provide very fast processing power could be used much more widely in future computing and electronics."


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paulguy

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Posted on 01-06-11 05:22:48 AM Link | Quote
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Well, it seems like it's a lot of very very specialized units, that perform 1 specific function. Nothing very new, but the idea of FPGAs in a computer that are openly software programmable would be pretty neat. Probably could make very efficient video decoders/encoders, graphics renderers, physics engines, etc. Would be neat if it had some analog components you could deal with, which might be more analogous to more "natural" things.

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Posted on 01-06-11 05:23:11 AM Link | Quote
This isn't much of a feat. It's somewhere between a CPU and a GPU, which is neat, but like a GPU it's completely useless at anything that isn't massively parallel. It isn't crippled by the typical GPU requirement of exactly parallel execution, but typical computer tasks don't scale all that well to a thousand cores.

MPEG-2 encoding happens to be something that's easy to run massively parallel, if you only care about speed.

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Posted on 01-06-11 05:23:40 AM Link | Quote
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The difficulty will be, as usual, making it more widely available and making more stuff capable of using it.

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Nicole

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Posted on 01-08-11 07:06:38 PM Link | Quote

Originally posted by paulguy
Well, it seems like it's a lot of very very specialized units, that perform 1 specific function. Nothing very new, but the idea of FPGAs in a computer that are openly software programmable would be pretty neat. Probably could make very efficient video decoders/encoders, graphics renderers, physics engines, etc. Would be neat if it had some analog components you could deal with, which might be more analogous to more "natural" things.

Yeah, I could see some interesting things happening if you have FPGA units within an otherwise "standard" computer... it'll be interesting to see if this goes anywhere.

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Posted on 01-09-11 03:59:43 AM Link | Quote

Integrating an FPGA into a Von Neumann system.. yeah, that could really be useful, esp. if you could reprogram it as easily as you can edit a file.

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Zero One
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Posted on 01-09-11 05:41:59 PM Link | Quote
It still couldn't run Crysis.

Would it ever really be necessary to have 1,000 cores? Maybe for medical research?

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Posted on 01-09-11 06:03:59 PM Link | Quote
Originally posted by Zero One
It still couldn't run Crysis.
Maybe not, but it could render the graphics.

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paulguy

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Posted on 01-09-11 11:18:34 PM Link | Quote
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Originally posted by Zero One
It still couldn't run Crysis.

Would it ever really be necessary to have 1,000 cores? Maybe for medical research?

I think you may be kind of missing the point of it. It's not 1000 general processing units that are somewhat OK at a lot of things, but not terribly fast; it's 1000 units that do 1 specific operation very fast. It can also be reconfigurable to do whatever the application needs, whether that's encoding, decoding, physics, graphics or really anything that needs to process a lot of data.

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Jul - Computers and Technology - Scottish Researchers Claim 1000-Core Processor New poll - New thread - New reply


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