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Friday, December 24, 2010

Intel® Core™2 Extreme Processor

Gaming and multimedia performance

Whether it's gaming, digital photography, or video editing, desktop PCs powered by the Intel® Core™2 Extreme processor handle today's entertainment demands.


Multi-core performance

Based on 45nm manufacturing technology, with four processing cores and hafnium-infused circuitry, the Intel Core 2 Extreme processor delivers more performance without using more energy. The Intel Core 2 Extreme processor QX9770 is an excellent choice for the latest generation of multi-threaded games and multimedia applications.

* 3.2GHz core speed
* 12 MB of total L2 cache
* 1600 MHz front side bus

Intel® Atom™ Processor

Transistor size comparison based on Intel® architecture products in production at the time of product disclosure (March 2008). Intel® 45nm and 32nm products are manufactured on a lead-free process. Leadfree per EU RoHS Directive (2002/95/EC, Annex A). Some RoHS exemptions may apply to other components used in the product package.
² Applies to components containing flame retardants and PVC only. Halogens are below 900 PPM bromine, 900 PPM chlorine, and 1500 PPM combined bromine and chlorine.
³ Select Intel® Atom™ processor SKUs support Intel® Burst Performance Technology (Intel® BPT)
Δ Intel® Hyper-Threading Technology (Intel® HT Technology) requires a device with an Intel® processor supporting Intel HT Technology and an Intel HT Technology-enabled platform controller hub, firmware, and operating system. Performance will vary depending on the specific hardware and software used.
Σ No computer system can provide absolute security under all conditions. A highly versatile crypto security engine is integrated within Intel® platform controller hub MP20 which with appropriate software enhances platform security capabilities. May require additional third-party software. Certain functionality may not be offered by some ISVs or service providers. Certain functionality may not be available in all countries. Intel assumes no liability for lost or stolen data and/or systems or any other damages resulting thereof.
§ Intel® Smart Sound Technology requires a system with an appropriate Intel® platform controller hub and may require additional third-party software or CODECs and the necessary drivers installed. System sound quality will vary depending on actual implementation, controller, CODEC, drivers, and speakers.

Intel® Atom™ Processor Z540

The Intel® Atom™ processor enables a broad range of device form factors, including smartphones, handhelds, tablets, netbooks, entry-level desktop PCs, and more—devices that are a perfect companion to your PC.
Enabling you to access email, instant messages (IM), and the Internet, Intel Atom processors also provide long battery life so you can stay connected on the go longer, and the processors can enable more energy efficient designs as they are based on 45nm Hi-k next generation Intel® Core™ microarchitecture. Plus, Intel Atom processors include integrated graphics, video, and memory controllers built right into the die.

Intel® Atom™ Processor Z520

The Intel® Atom™ processor enables a broad range of device form factors, including smartphones, handhelds, tablets, netbooks, entry-level desktop PCs, and more—devices that are a perfect companion to your PC.
Enabling you to access email, instant messages (IM), and the Internet, Intel Atom processors also provide long battery life so you can stay connected on the go longer, and the processors can enable more energy efficient designs as they are based on 45nm Hi-k next generation Intel® Core™ microarchitecture. Plus, Intel Atom processors include integrated graphics, video, and memory controllers built right into the die.

Intel® Atom™ Processor Z500

The Intel® Atom™ processor enables a broad range of device form factors, including smartphones, handhelds, tablets, netbooks, entry-level desktop PCs, and more—devices that are a perfect companion to your PC.
Enabling you to access email, instant messages (IM), and the Internet, Intel Atom processors also provide long battery life so you can stay connected on the go longer, and the processors can enable more energy efficient designs as they are based on 45nm Hi-k next generation Intel® Core™ microarchitecture. Plus, Intel Atom processors include integrated graphics, video, and memory controllers built right into the die.

Intel® Atom™ Processor

The Intel® Atom™ processor enables a broad range of device form factors, including smartphones, handhelds, tablets, netbooks, entry-level desktop PCs, and more—devices that are a perfect companion to your PC.
Enabling you to access email, instant messages (IM), and the Internet, Intel Atom processors also provide long battery life so you can stay connected on the go longer, and the processors can enable more energy efficient designs as they are based on 45nm Hi-k next generation Intel® Core™ microarchitecture. Plus, Intel Atom processors include integrated graphics, video, and memory controllers built right into the die.

Monday, December 20, 2010

4040

  • 4040-CPU
  • 4101-1024-bit (256 × 4) Static RAM with separate I/O
  • 4201-4MHz Clock Generator
  • 4207-General Purpose Byte I/O Port
  • 4209-General Purpose Byte I/O Port
  • 4211-General Purpose Byte I/O Port
  • 4265-Programmable General Purpose I/O Device
  • 4269-Programmable Keyboard Display Device
  • 4289-Standard Memory Interface for MCS-4/40
  • 4308-8192-bit (1024 × 8) ROM w/ 4-bit I/O Ports
  • 4316-16384-bit (2048 × 8) Static ROM
  • 4702-2048-bit (256 × 8) EPROM
  • 4801–5.185 MHz Clock Generator Crystal for 4004/4201A or 4040/4201A

Intel 4004: first single-chip microprocessor

  • Introduced November 15, 1971
  • Clock rate 740 kHz
  • 0.07 MIPS
  • Bus Width 4 bits (multiplexed address/data due to limited pins)
  • PMOS
  • Number of Transistors 2,300 at 10 µm
  • Addressable Memory 640 bytes
  • Program Memory 4 KB (4 KB)
  • One of the earliest Commercial  Microprocessors (cf. Four Phase Systems AL1, F14 CADC)
  • Originally designed to be used in Busicom calculator

The 8-bit processors

8008

  • Introduced April 1, 1972
  • Clock rate 500 kHz (8008–1: 800 kHz)
  • 0.05 MIPS
  • Bus Width 8 bits (multiplexed address/data due to limited pins)
  • Enhancement load PMOS logic
  • Number of Transistors 3,500 at 10 µm
  • Addressable memory 16 KB
  • Typical in e
  • Introduced March 1976
  • Clock rate 3 MHz
  • 0.37 MIPS
  • Bus Width 8 bits data, 16 bits address
  • Depletion load NMOS logic
  • Number of Transistors 6,500 at 3 µm
  • Binary compatible downwards with the 8080.
  • Used in Toledo scales. Also was used as a computer peripheral controller – modems, harddisks,printers, etc...
  • CMOS 80C85 in Mars Sojourner, Radio Shack Model 100 portable.
  • High level of integration, operating for the first time on a single 5 volt power supply, from 12 volts previously. Also featured serial I/O,3 maskable interrupts,1 Non-maskable interrupt,1 externally expandable interrupt w/[8259],status,DMA.
  • arly 8 bit microcomputers, dumb terminals, general calculators, bottling machines
  • Developed in tandem with 4004
  • Originally intended for use in the Datapoint 2200 microcomputer
  • Key volume deployment in Texas Instruments 742 microcomputer in >3,000 Ford dealerships
8085

512 Intel Atoms in server.


"Using today's server processors is like driving the space shuttle to the supermarket--they do a lot of things that are overkill for pushing an Apache fork," said Andrew Feldman, chief executive of SeaMicro, referring the kinds of Web services handled in many data centers.
"We become important to people that have more than 100 servers," said Feldman."At that level power and space begin to be meaningful to you," he said.
SeaMicro developed an ASIC that links 1.6 GHz single-core Z530 Atom chips in large clusters. The ASIC also replaces other server components such as storage and network controllers, further shrinking the system's power and size.
Feldman claims Atom provides significantly better performance per watt on Web server jobs than other chips it tested, including dual-core ARM Cortex A9 processors. However it has designed its approach to be able to work with other CPUs in the future.
"Today the Atom part is head and shoulders best in class, but ARM is running hard," said Feldman. "If we had a server SoC rather than a chip set, we could have doubled the number of CPUs in the system," he added.
Marvell said it will deliver later this year dual-core ARM Cortex A9 chips targeted at servers. Dell said it will test the chips this summer, HP Labs recently talked about its research in the area, and an executive for IBM expressed interest in the trend.
ARM chip makers Nvidia and Samsung are also interested in the servers, said Feldman. When SeaMicro was testing processors the Marvell chips "weren’t quite ready, but they are coming," said Feldman.
Market researchers are skeptical about how much traction the new designs will get and how soon. Competitors said the trend to low power servers is clearly on their radar screens.
“We are seeing increasing interest in power efficient servers," said Paul Prince, chief technology officer for Dell's enterprise group.
Prince said Dell has a broad line of servers including custom designs built for big data centers using the Via Nano processor.
"The claimed power savings [of the SeaMicro design] are impressive, [and] users who have massive scale-out requirements and use home-grown or open-source software may find the offering very attractive," said Nathan Brookwood, principal of market watcher Insight64 (Saratoga, Calif.).
However, "users who pay for software based on the number of CPUs their software uses will probably find multicore Xeons and Opterons to be a better choice, and users who worry about data integrity may be turned off by Atom's lack of ECC support," he added.
How it works
The SeaMicro design was the brainchild of Gary Lauterbach. He designed MicroSparc 3 and 4 server processors at Sun Microsystems, worked on a supercomputer R&D project at Sun and designed the architecture for the upcoming high-end Bulldozer core at Advanced Micro Devices.
The heart of the SM1000 is an ASIC that links the Atom chips on a multi-dimensional torus interconnect with a total aggregate bandwidth of 1.28 Terabits/s. The chip also also emulates to a Linux operating system motherboard components such as storage and network controllers.
The 130nm ASIC links to Atom chip sets over PCI Express, handling standard Linux commands. Given its high level of abstraction, the ASIC could be used with other processors in the future.
"The trick is to present to the CPU and operating system all the devices it expects," said Feldman. "Then there are no special drivers required," he said.
The SeaMicro server uses three sets of adapter cards. A 5x12 inch computer card packs eight Z530 single-core Atom chips and their associated support chips. It also includes an ASIC and 2 Gbytes DDR2 DRAM for each CPU.
Critics have said the relatively small memory subsystems of Atom and ARM processors would make them inadequate for running the memory-intensive MapReduce and Hadoop algorithms that are strategic for big Web sites such as Google and Yahoo. But Feldman disagreed.
"We have six customers currently doing MapReduce," he said.
A second card in the SeaMicro systems is a disk controller. It uses two Xilinx Virtex 5 FPGAs to link to the ASICs and eight serial ATA hard disk or solid-state drives. A networking card uses similar FPGAs and supports eight Gbit or two 10G Ethernet ports.
SeaMicro also implemented in-line load balancing as part of its network design. The feature saves additional power and space by eliminating the need for a separate load balancing system typically used with today's servers.
The load balancing feature supports existing server management software packages.
"We had leading data center companies come and show us their management tools so we could make sure we can manage their systems," said Feldman. "Mostly they use their own scripts for features such as pooling computer nodes and setting utilization thresholds," he said.
A fully configured SM1000 can pack 64 SATA drives and 64 Gbit Ethernet links or 16 10G links. A base system costs $139,000 and consumes less than 2 kilowatts.
The company has raised $25 million in venture financing from investors including Khosla Ventures and Draper Fischer Jurvetson. It also won a Department of Energy grant for $9.3 million to help develop its system.
The company is not currently seeking more financing. All 52 of its employees are based in Silicon Valley.
"We believe in hiring extraordinary people and sitting them next to each other," said Feldman.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Chief Technology Officer


Stuart McGill was appointed Chief Technology Officer at Micro Focus in February 2006 and is responsible for shaping future product innovations and bringing world-class software solutions to market. Prior to this, since joining Micro Focus in 1984, he has held a number of positions throughout the company, including worldwide head of Marketing and Product Management; Europe and Middle East sales; Business Development (responsible for acquisitions); and managing Europe and Middle East Year 2000 operations. Before joining Micro Focus, McGill worked for, and was trained by, Shell in various roles. McGill has also created, developed and sold businesses in the software development and marketing services sectors. Mr McGill holds an undergraduate degree in Mechanical Engineering and a Masters degree in Engineering, Economics and Management from Birmingham University.

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