Dual-Core Versus Quad-Core: Part 2
The Intel Core 2 E8500 and the AMD Phenom X4 9350e offer high performance within the same 65 W power envelope, and are sold at the same price point. As we’ll see AMD suffers defeat as Intel comes out on top, but this time it’s through no fault of its own. Read More
- Intel Cuts Power Consumption Rating Of "Skulltrail Xeon"
- Intel Nehalem To Play Nice With Enthusiast Memory
- AMD Outsources To TSMC For CPUs
- AMD Rolls Out Low-power Quad-core Opteron CPUs
- 65 Nm GPUs For Xbox 360 In Production, Xbox '540' Coming In 2009
- Apple May Have Been An Investor In P.A. Semi Before Acquisition
- Intel, SGI To Build 10 PFlops Supercomputer For NASA
- AMD Announces 6 And 12-core Opterons
- Intel To Launch 4-series Chipsets At Computex 2008
- Intel And Nvidia Co-sponsors In Parallel Programming Initiative
Intel To Launch Tukwila Itanium Processor In 2009?
It looks like we might not see Intel’s quad-core processor for mainframe systems this year after all. According to Brooke Crothers over at Cnet, Tukwila "will come out in early 2009", which appears to be a bit later than what has been rumored so far. Intel previously said that Tukwila would begin shipping sometime this year, which apparently is still the plan, according to Intel spokesperson Nick Knupffer.
Intel has not confirmed a launch time frame for Tukwila so far, but recently increased its communications efforts for the CPU at its developer conference in Shanghai last March as well as at the IEEE International Solid State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) last February. Tukwila will be Intel’s first 2-billion transistor processor, integrate four cores on a monolithic die that measures 699 mm2.
The 65 nm CPU will run at up to 2 GHz, integrate 30 MB of L2 cache and 96 GB/s processor-to-processor bandwidth through the firm’s new "QuickPath" Interconnect. The peak memory bandwidth of Tukwila is 34 GB/s. Intel says Tukwila has three times the circuitry of the current Itanium 9100 generation with Montvale core. In terms of performance, the manufacturer promises that this new processor will offer about twice the performance of Montvale, while consuming about 25% more power (the CPU is rated at a 130 watt TDP).
Despite the fact that we do not hear much about the Itanium CPU these days, the Itanium Solutions Alliance announced that Itanium-based factory system revenue and system volume continued to grow in 2007, with a year-over-year increase of 30.8 and 36.3%, respectively.
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