Larrabee info.

If you touch your software enough does it become hardware?

Moderator: Forum Moderators

Post Reply
Dr. kitteny berk
Morbo
Morbo
Posts: 19676
Joined: December 10th, 2004, 21:53
Contact:

Larrabee info.

Post by Dr. kitteny berk »

Last edited by Dr. kitteny berk on August 4th, 2008, 8:10, edited 1 time in total.
Dr. kitteny berk
Morbo
Morbo
Posts: 19676
Joined: December 10th, 2004, 21:53
Contact:

Post by Dr. kitteny berk »

Very parallel x86 processors on a card, lots of talk of scaling, but no actual mention of performance.


Will be interesting to see if it's any good.
No1Jew
Meerkat of DOOM
Meerkat of DOOM
Posts: 150
Joined: July 3rd, 2007, 16:37
Contact:

Post by No1Jew »

WTF!

I read all of that and am still none the wiser. A bit over my head I think. But by the sounds of things, in 3 years time when I'll be upgrading again the market should be very competative !!

Good luck Intel
deject
Berk
Berk
Posts: 10353
Joined: December 7th, 2004, 17:02
Location: Oklahoma City, OK, USA
Contact:

Post by deject »

Dr. kitteny berk wrote:Very parallel x86 processors on a card, lots of talk of scaling, but no actual mention of performance.


Will be interesting to see if it's any good.
:above: running everything in software means that when Microsoft releases DirectX 69, Larrabee will be able to support it. I just don't know that they'll be able to run enough operations in parallel (especially with an x86-based processor) to perform as well as current GPUs.
HereComesPete
Throbbing Cupcake
Throbbing Cupcake
Posts: 10249
Joined: February 17th, 2007, 23:05
Location: The maleboge

Post by HereComesPete »

To me it's still mostly a tech exercise on a build type that's ageing fast.

/pessimist

If we achieve a truly different way of processing information, such as that 'snail slime and gold cpu' idea that was floating about then it will probably offer such a significant new investment area that this will fall by the wayside.

It'll be interesting to see what AMD/ATi and Nvidia push as alternatives.

The combined effort of AMD and ATi working with a similar x86 ring with a shitload of cores combined with the caching ability they have now, mixed with the gpu expertise might well be the winning formula.

Nvidia are kind of out in the cold in terms of this type of architecture, they don't have the same level of expertise in cpu making. I'm guessing they'll push a lot of money at a monster card that eats psu's but will destroy anything thrown at it and hope the enthusiast will buy them.

I am quite excited as to what the next few years brings in terms of change, because the 260/280 release was exceedingly underwhelming, and the 38xx might be good, but isn't a huge jump either.
Post Reply