Electronics Weekly Magazine
Loading

Sign-up for newsletters:

Electronics Weekly newsletters - Sign up for Made By Monkeys, Mannerisms, Gadget Master and Daily and Monthly newsletters

Electronics Weekly newslettersGet these stories direct to your inbox - sign up for free E-newsletters >>

For more on microprocessor, MCU, and digital signal processor (DSP) content, see Design/Micros-DSPs

Intel plans move to 32nm processors

Colleen Taylor, Electronic News
Friday 15 June 2007 00:00

At a briefing here this afternoon that was short on details but long on the company's big-picture progress, Intel revealed the roadmap for its high-performance Itanium processor family over the coming years.

On track for a late 2008 release is the company's next Itanium, codenamed "Tukwilla," a quad-core, single-die processor manufactured at the 65nm processing node.

According to Diane Bryant, v-p of Intel's digital enterprise segment, Tukwilla will boast twice the performance of Intel's dual-core Itanium 2 processor, and each core will be capable of supporting eight threads.

In addition, Tukwilla will have a new platform architecture: the memory controller will be integrated in the chip, moving off of the front side bus interconnect.

Also, a new mainframe-level RAS memory correction technology, "double device data correction" (DDDC), is meant to allow Tukwilla chips to continue running even in the event of two sequential DRAM device errors.

Intel's current generation Itanium offers a top clock speed of 1.6GHz; IBM's competing dual-core POWER6 chip, meanwhile, tops out at 4.6GHz. Bryant would not disclose details of Tukwilla's clock speed, but noted that unlike IBM, Intel has opted to focus on "performance through multicore parallelism, rather than through frequency."

Next in line after 65nm Tukwilla will be a 32nm Itanium offering codenamed "Poulson" — leapfrogging the company past the 45nm node. Bryant disclosed precious few details on Poulson, other than to say it would not ship until 2010, at earliest, and would feature a "massive on-die cache" for memory and boast more than four cores.  After Poulson, Bryant said, would be an even more vaguely defined offering codenamed "Kittson."

 

Comments powered by Disqus

Share the content

Most Viewed

Products

Related Jobs

Resources