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12/06/2007, 11:40am, EST

Thursday, December 6th

IBM optics promise many-core super CPU

IBM's Silicon Photonics research group today published news of what it believes is a major breakthrough in increasing processor performance with multi-core processors. Instead of relying on typical copper wire connections between cores, the New York state-based firm has developed a unit it refers to as an electro-optic modulator. The device uses nanotechnology and a small laser to convert electrical signals into pulses of directed light that mimic the binary code of a processor. This hardware is 100 to 1,000 times smaller than the links used to join multiple cores today and could all but eliminate the large gaps between cores that limit their overall size, according to IBM.

The advancement could also result in a single-chip processor that exceeds the power of even the best supercomputers today, the company boasts. As many processors often use miles of large copper wiring to achieve the same effect, the technique could be combined with other advancements to place hundreds or thousands of cores on a single chip die, allowing a resulting CPU to process many tasks at once without bogging down due to size or the loss of performance associated with coordinating the actions of more than a few cores at once. The reduced heat associated with using light pulses instead of hot wiring would also reduce power consumption to the point where a supercomputer that needs the power of a large neighborhood could be shrunk to the same size and power demands of a notebook, IBM says.

The research group intends that the electro-optic modulator be used in production computers but has not provided a timetable for when regular users could expect to see the technology in shipping products, pointing to a release in the next few years rather than a short-term launch. IBM is expected to license the technology but may use it for its own POWER chips and for eventual successors to the Cell found in the PlayStation 3.


Filed under: computers, industry
Other story tags: IBM, nanotechnology

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Hmm
0
12/06, 12:32pm, EST
Is that the same kind of announcement they had when they had the supercharged G6 chip too ? LOL

IBM is full of shit. That's about all they're fast at. TALK!
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G6
0
12/06, 3:13pm, EST
To my knowledge, the only company that has announced a "G6" is Pontiac. IBM does sell the Power6, marketed as the fastest microprocessor in the world. It's just not fit for a desktop and certainly not a laptop (nor is it intended to be). If IBM is full of shit, it's full of powerful shit.
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Same kind of news
0
12/06, 6:23pm, EST
was announced on BBC news headlines, and has been touted as an upcoming technology for a year or so now. It's good to see further creativity in this kind of technology's application. Now we can look forward to a big jump in computing power, but the price at the beginning is still up in the air.

So the picture now has multiple 45nm-scale procs roped together into a larger "cell" processor and talking via lightwwave messages, making for a smaller, many times faster, cooler, and energy-efficient machine.

Just because the company lost its franchise to a bigger, cheaper company doesn't mean they can't come up with anything. Intel is invested in incremental growth trying to follow the guidelines in what's-his-name's Law, or keep place with the rest of the current, operating industry. Looking for a big leap like this could put IBM back up as a giant player in the chip market. That doesn't mean to invest now, or anything, but it's fun to consider the possibilities of anyone getting this to work.

And just who do you think would have the ingenuity and skill to put some emerging technology with vast potential into the market. Why, Apple of course. Give it 5 years, and or so, and we might see a realease.
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