AMD Reveals More 'Barcelona' Secrets

Anusha

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Jun 13, 2006
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Advanced Micro Devices will pull back the curtain a little more on its first quad-core processor the week of Feb. 12. At the International Solid State Circuits Conference in San Francisco, which kicks off Feb. 11, the company's engineers will demonstrate new technology that will make AMD's first quad-core chip more power-efficient than previous dual-core processors. The quad-core AMD Opteron processor, which goes by the codename "Barcelona," is scheduled to be released later this year. It will compete against Intel's quad-core Xeon 5300 series, which the company released last November.

AMD, which is based in Sunnyvale, Calif., believes that its engineers have developed a better, "native" quad-core design, which allows four, x86 processing cores on a single piece of silicon. By comparison, Intel's quad-core processor ties two dual-core chips onto a single piece of silicon. In addition, Intel and AMD have each poured money and resources into technologies that ease the power consumption and heat generation of their processors. At this week's conference, AMD will show its quad-core processor's power efficiency. Specifically, engineers have improved on the company's PowerNow technology, which can increase or reduce the amount of power to the chip depending on the demand.

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chaminga_d

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amdbarcelona550x512.jpg


Advanced Micro Devices showed a photo of the "Barcelona" processor, a quad-core Opteron chip due to ship in mid-2007, during a speech Oct. 10 at the Fall Processor Forum in San Jose, Calif.
 

Anusha

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chaminga_d said:
amdbarcelona550x512.jpg


Advanced Micro Devices showed a photo of the "Barcelona" processor, a quad-core Opteron chip due to ship in mid-2007, during a speech Oct. 10 at the Fall Processor Forum in San Jose, Calif.
You mean a picture of the core, not the processor :)
 

Anusha

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AMD’s Quad-Core Chips to Feature Advanced Power Saving Techniques.

AMD’s Quad-Core Chips to Feature Advanced Power Saving Techniques.

Advanced Micro Devices, the No. 2 maker of x86 microprocessors, continues to unveil details about its forthcoming code-named K8L chips for various applications and quad-core chips for servers. During a presentation to the International Solid State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) AMD unveiled some of the technologies that are set to reduce power consumption of the new chips.

Earlier it was indicated that improvements of AMD PowerNow! technology will enable systems based on native quad-core AMD Opteron processors to dynamically adjust frequencies at the individual core level for further power consumption reductions.

In addition, the new K8L processors will be able to change voltages of different partitions of the chip individually as well: for example, it will be possible to reduce processing engines’ voltage independently from memory controller. This enables the memory controller to service external memory requests independent from core p-state transitions, thus enabling p-state opportunities which can lead to additional power savings.

Additionally, the system memory interface of K8L also includes a feature that powers down memory logic when not in use.

AMD has also made extensive use of “clock gating” in the “Barcelona” design to enable automatic shut-down of areas of logic not being utilized for further power savings.

As previously reported, AMD’s code-named Barcelona processors for servers produced using 65nm process technology and featuring a broad range of functionality and micro-architectural improvements will be drop-in compatible with socket 1207 (socket F) infrastructure and will be commercially available in mid-2007.

“Today’s IT system purchasers must weigh performance-per-watt as well as raw performance as they make their buying decisions,” noted Nathan Brookwood, Research Fellow at Insight 64. “By doubling the number of cores, adding a shared third level cache and applying a variety of other extensive CPU design enhancements, AMD’s ‘Barcelona’ designers clearly have addressed the numerator in the performance-per-watt equation. Today’s ISSCC disclosures reveal ‘Barcelona’ also includes innovations such as the ability to vary each CPU core’s frequency independently, along with a number of proven energy-saving techniques like ‘clock-gating’ that address the denominator in the equation. The combination of these new performance and power-saving features should drive a dramatic improvement in the already strong performance-per-watt AMD Opteron processor-based systems offer today.”

Source: Xbitlabs
 

Anusha

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prasadana2 said:
cant imagine even
incide a processor.
there are millions of diodes.
Diodes? You can't differentiate any of the components like that. There are millions of transistors in it, but all are made on the same silicon substrate.