
Intel Takes Cool to the Core
Chip maker is expected to share details of its next-generation architecture.
Tom Krazit, IDG News Service
Monday, August 22, 2005
Speed and heat are out at the world's largest
chipmaker; power management and cool are in. This week Intel will
reveal details about a new chip architecture that will allow the
company to put a lid on the runaway power consumption of its Pentium 4
and Xeon chips and to create chips with more than one processing core.
Intel has not yet publicly disclosed specifics about its next-generation architecture,
other than to announce that it would be discussed at this week's Intel
Developer Forum. Analysts and other sources familiar with Intel's
plans, however, expect CEO Paul Otellini to say that Intel's processors
for the second half of 2006 will use an architecture inspired by the
Pentium M notebook processor.
Intel launched the Pentium 4 and Xeon processors
at the beginning of the decade and based them on an architecture
designed to deliver maximum performance. At the time, clock speed was
thought to be the most easily understood aspect of processor
performance, despite the fact that clock speed is one of many metrics
used to increase performance in processors.
Heating Up
Increases in clock speed--the rate at which a
chip executes instructions--require increases in the electrical power
used to run the chip. Keeping this power under control wasn't a problem
for Intel until the advent of new manufacturing technologies in 2003.
As always, Intel used these new technologies to shrink the size of its
transistors, but these devices had gotten so small that power was able
to escape the transistors and leak out of the chip as heat.
Dealing with this level of heat
has been difficult for IT managers trying to cool Intel's most recent
batch of chips in servers. For example, many enterprises have been
forced to spend more than they anticipated on sophisticated layout
strategies designed to maximize airflow in their server rooms.
The Pentium M architecture is designed to do
more work per clock cycle, so it does not have to run as fast or use as
much power to produce results similar to the Pentium 4 or Xeon
processors. This also makes it easier for Intel to create chips with
four or more processing cores that will fit into PCs and servers
without the need for expensive and bulky cooling equipment.
"This is an acknowledgment that the market is
more than just megahertz now," says Dean McCarron, principal analyst at
Mercury Research.
Intel is also expected to talk more about its
effort to build other features such as virtualization and management
technologies directly into its processors and chip sets.
Performance isn't always the primary requirement
of IT managers, according to McCarron. They are also worried about many
other issues, such as security and manageability.

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