At his keynote address to the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in San Francisco,
the company's general manager of architecture, Sean Maloney, will be showing off
Intel's first 32nm processor, codenamed Westmere.
The new chip has graphics capability built into the core processor – a first
for Intel – and has new Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) instructions also
built in for faster encryption and decryption. The new chip will go into
production in the fourth quarter of the year.
“The rapidly increasing number of transistors and processor instructions we
add have made possible the integration of more and more capabilities and
features within our processors,” he said.
“This has driven an incredible amount of innovation throughout the industry.”
Maloney will also be showing the Westmere-EP server platform, and said that
it would provide a performance boost greater than that seen with the
introduction of the Xeon 5500 series of server chips over the previous
generation.
Intel is also working on an ultra-low power server chip in the Xeon 3000
range, which will operate at just 30W.
As a follow-up to Westmere, the next-generation Sandy Bridge chip will boast
even faster graphics capabilities thanks to Intel's sixth-generation graphics
core. This will accelerate floating point, video and processor-intensive
software applications.
To help IT administrators, Intel has developed a new PC management tool
called Keyboard Video Mouse Remote Control, which allows managers to view
problems exactly as the user sees them, which it hopes will speed up fault
solving.
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