SAN FRANCISCO(AP)
Intel Corp. cracked the lid Tuesday on a new chip design that is
at once a big challenge to smaller rival Advanced Micro Devices
Inc. and an admission that AMD nailed a key design feature before
it slipped into a severe financial slump.
Intel, the world's largest computer chip maker, showed off
the new blueprint, known as a microarchitecture, for its chips at a
developers conference in San Francisco.
Though some of the details were already known, the design's
formal unveiling represented another demonstration of Intel's
advantage over AMD in cranking out new chip designs once every two
years, a factor that helped send AMD's stock price down 5
percent in an overall down day for technology shares.
AMD has racked up nearly $5 billion in losses during the past 18
months and last month replaced Hector Ruiz, who had been running
AMD for six years, with a new chief executive, Dirk Meyer.
The details of Intel's microprocessor architecture are
always highly technical. But they're also closely watched
because of the ubiquity of Intel's chips in personal computers
and corporate servers.
One of the most significant changes was already known. Intel now
plans to build a part called an integrated memory controller _
which moves information between the microprocessor and the
computer's memory _ directly into the processor itself.
That's a key change because processors are asked to do more
and more, and any lag in communication can seriously hurt
performance. AMD has already been incorporating integrated memory
controllers into its processors.
Because of that and other tweaks, Intel said its new design,
which is code-named Nehalem, will triple the speed at which data
can be written to memory or read back, compared to previous
generations. Intel says Nehalem also will have nearly double the
3-D animation capabilities as past chips, and better utilize the
multiple "cores," or processing engines, on each
chip.
Chip makers are adding multiple cores to their chips,
essentially jamming many separate processors onto the same slice of
silicon, to make sure they're able to continue ramping up
performance without running into overheating problems.
Intel said four-core Nehalem chips, which are due to be in
production by the end of 2008 and will first target servers and
desktop computers and later laptops, have the ability to turn
individual cores on and off and can be programmed to boost the
speed of active cores when the workload ramps up.
Intel shares fell 39 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $23.62. AMD
shares fell 31 cents, or 5.3 percent, to $5.60.
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