Intel has
entered the product planning phase for a new chip architecture codenamed
Larrabee, the company said at its
Intel
Developer Forum conference in Beijing.
Larrabee products will offer highly parallel chips based on existing Intel
architecture and will support existing software tools. It will be designed to
scale to trillions of floating point operations per second.
The chip will include enhancements to accelerate applications such as
scientific computing, recognition, mining, synthesis, visualisation, financial
analysis and healthcare applications.
The announcement was notably short on technical details, however. Intel
declined to say when it expects to ship the first products, where Larrabee fits
in its product roadmap or what products it replaces.
"We are not giving details of specific products," Sean Maloney, general
manager at Intel's sales and marketing group, said in a briefing with reporters
on Monday.
"We are announcing the product planning phase. And we are saying that we are
using the technology to address older applications in new ways."
The Larrabee codename has circulated on hardware enthusiast websites for the
past 11 months, and has been identified as a high-end graphics processor.
vnunet.com's
sister publication
The
Inquirer has described the chip as a processor with
multiple
x86 'mini-cores' and called it a "central graphic processor unit".
The notion of using a graphics processor to accelerate floating point
intensive applications in areas such as scientific computing is not new.
AMD started
shipping its Stream processor last November dedicated to the scientific
computing market.
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