Thursday, August 14th 2008

Nehalem's Successors Caught on Slides at IDF

French website CanardPlus published slides from Intel covering its future plans and product evolution model called the "tick tock" model in which an architecture is released every time frame and improvised following it, where the fabrication process is shrunk and some features added. Les nouveaux CPU suivront donc le schéma de développement « The new CPU release will follow the pattern of development "Tick-Tock", ie a new architecture every two years (Tock), followed by a die shrink (Tick) to increase the fine print.
Nehalem processors are made of logic-blocks (cores, without some machinery) blocks provide modularity and products can be engineered on the quality and quantity of these blocks. An insight to the architecture is provided.


Successors to Nehalem

Sandybridge: Planned for 2010, this will succeed current Nehalem chips, the base architecture on the whole is similar to that of Nehalem, codenamed Gesher. It will have 8 cores, 16 MB of L3 cache and a new instruction set called Advanced Vector Extensions.

Its entry is expected to be as significant as that of SSE in 1999 for the Pentium III for the computing world, mainly because:
  • The extension of the current SSE registers 128 to 256 bits, while remaining compatible with 128-bit SSE instructions.
  • The rearrangement advanced data: a single operation can simultaneously handle 8 data bits 32
Haswell: Successor to Sandybridge, entry to the 22nm fabrication process, something truly revolutionary architecture-wise, 8-cores and the introduction of FMA (Fused Multiply-Add), which allows for simultaneous operation of multiplication and addition via the same instruction.
Source: CanardPlus
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34 Comments on Nehalem's Successors Caught on Slides at IDF

#1
ShadowFold
wtf is that cartoon thing on the first pic..
Posted on Reply
#2
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
ShadowFoldwtf is that cartoon thing on the first pic..
That source website's content. They add cartoons to comment on stuff (the way our computer books looked illustrative (eg: a bunny holding a laptop) back in early school)
Posted on Reply
#3
chron
you know what they say, Haswell that ends well
Posted on Reply
#4
zithe
chronyou know what they say, Haswell that ends well
Corny.

Now AMD needs to turn deneb into low end and get their own CPU with 18mb of L3! :D
Posted on Reply
#6
CDdude55
Crazy 4 TPU!!!
zitheCorny.

Now AMD needs to turn deneb into low end and get their own CPU with 18mb of L3! :D
Lol.:laugh:(at the ''Corny'' part)
Posted on Reply
#7
CDdude55
Crazy 4 TPU!!!
Aw man, This is what i hate about PC hardware. Nehalem isn't even out and there already talking about the next one.:( I just want to stick to the C2D till i get a C2Q, but wtf).

I only game and go on the internet on PC. So i hope when games come out they wont be saying, '' Best played on Core i7'' when they start up or i just might have to switch to Consoles. I dont have the cash to be making these kinds of upgrades Intel!!:(
Posted on Reply
#8
zithe
CDdude55Aw man, This is what i hate about PC hardware. Nehalem isn't even out and there already talking about the next one.:( I just want to stick to the C2D till i get a C2Q, but wtf).

I only game and go on the internet on PC. So i hope when games come out they wont be saying, '' Best played on Core i7'' when they start up or i just might have to switch to Consoles. I dont have the cash to be making these kinds of upgrades Intel!!:(
No point in going console. Your rig will soon kill all of them lawl.
Posted on Reply
#9
CDdude55
Crazy 4 TPU!!!
zitheNo point in going console. Your rig will soon kill all of them lawl.
Good point.:)
Posted on Reply
#10
WhiteLotus
8 cores - for servers right?

Surely no PC enthusiast will need 8 cores! unless of course programming for games/windows changes dramatically to be easily threaded for multiple cores.
Posted on Reply
#11
farlex85
WhiteLotus8 cores - for servers right?

Surely no PC enthusiast will need 8 cores! unless of course programming for games/windows changes dramatically to be easily threaded for multiple cores.
Which will likely be the case. AMDs next procs are rumored to have 8 to 12 cores. Nehalem will have 4-16 logical cores (multi-threaded cores, 2-8 actual cores). With projections like that, I'd say it's safe to say we'll got some multi-threaded software in our future.
Posted on Reply
#12
AddSub
2010? That soon? Not 2012-2013?

If they are planning all this for 2010, then I'm skipping Nehalem for sure.
Posted on Reply
#13
WhiteLotus
To be honest I think that once we get into these sorts of cores -there will be NO real improvement apart from a bigger e-penis and bragging rights. Unless of course they truly do have something special up the sleeves in the way of virtual reality.
Posted on Reply
#14
farlex85
AddSub2010? That soon? Not 2012-2013?

If they are planning all this for 2010, then I'm skipping Nehalem for sure.
It will most likely be late 2010, and I personally think this timeline depends on AMD's ability to keep up. Right now intel is far ahead, and if amd doesn't have a proper answer to nehalem, I can't see intel rushing to outdo themselves too much more. If they do, we'll likely see some very high prices, or sandy bridge ending up quite similar to nehalem.
WhiteLotusTo be honest I think that once we get into these sorts of cores -there will be NO real improvement apart from a bigger e-penis and bragging rights. Unless of course they truly do have something special up the sleeves in the way of virtual reality.
There are already some benefits shown from having so many cores. Early tests of nehalem have beaten the pulp out of Core 2s in certain tests, largely thanks to the 8 logical cores. In any app that's capable of utilizing more cores, this is very beneficial. It's just not prevalent in games and the like right now.
Posted on Reply
#15
Pinchy
AddSubIf they are planning all this for 2010, then I'm skipping Nehalem for sure.
Rofl I always say the same thing but it never happens :p...

If you buy/sell at the right times it isnt that expensive....eg dont go buying as soon as it comes out, wait a couple of months till the price drops.
Posted on Reply
#16
zithe
Looks like I'll get a sandybridge when I graduate. (unless AMD comes out on top and still stays nice with the prices)
Posted on Reply
#17
AddSub
We will see. Not in a hurry here. If nothing, original Nehalem CPUs should be quite a bit cheaper by 2010. I figure my 65nm quad @ 3.5GHz with several high-end nVidia GPUs in SLI + 4-to-8GB of RAM should keep up with my needs until 2010.

Who knows, AMD might pull through and come up with something worthwhile, although I seriously doubt it. There is a bigger chance of bankruptcy for AMD by 2010 than any sort of miracle, the way they are going.
Posted on Reply
#18
Scrizz
ShadowFoldwtf is that cartoon thing on the first pic..
LMFAO :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#19
zithe
AddSubWe will see. Not in a hurry here. If nothing, original Nehalem CPUs should be quite a bit cheaper by 2010. I figure my 65nm quad @ 3.5GHz with several high-end nVidia GPUs in SLI + 4-to-8GB of RAM should keep up with my needs until 2010.

Who knows, AMD might pull through and come up with something worthwhile, although I seriously doubt it. There is a bigger chance of bankruptcy for AMD by 2010 than any sort of miracle, the way they are going.
AMD has been in worse shape before believe it or not. =P They could easily grab a larger share of the market by doing some more marketing and actually TRYING to make a CPU. If they had money and not debt, they'd probably be making great CPUs right now.
Posted on Reply
#20
CDdude55
Crazy 4 TPU!!!
AddSubWe will see. Not in a hurry here. If nothing, original Nehalem CPUs should be quite a bit cheaper by 2010. I figure my 65nm quad @ 3.5GHz with several high-end nVidia GPUs in SLI + 4-to-8GB of RAM should keep up with my needs until 2010.

Who knows, AMD might pull through and come up with something worthwhile, although I seriously doubt it. There is a bigger chance of bankruptcy for AMD by 2010 than any sort of miracle, the way they are going.
That the same thing i am going to do. In 2010 i should be in college(graduating in the upcoming year), and by then i should be making some cash. But if i find a job earlier i may save up for Core i7.
Posted on Reply
#21
CDdude55
Crazy 4 TPU!!!
Is Nehalm only used with DDR3? Also, are all Core i7's Quad cores?

When i get a job i am going to save up a whole lot to build a Nehealm system

Maybe with:

Core i7 2.66

X58 mobo

DDR 3 RAM

4870 X2

Some good PSU

and still thinking of rest of stuff.
Posted on Reply
#22
farlex85
CDdude55Is Nehalm only used with DDR3? Also, are all Core i7's Quad cores?

When i get a job i am going to save up a whole lot to build a Nehealm system

Maybe with:

Core i7 2.66

X58 mobo

DDR 3 RAM

4870 X2

Some good PSU

and still thinking of rest of stuff.
Yeah as of now the direct memory controller is only for ddr3. The bloomfield cores (the initial nehalems) will all be quad cores that are hyper-threaded (giving them 8 logical cores in windows). Later in 2009 the lower end Havendale cores are to be released which are dual core (4 logical cores in windows). There are others, I think variations after the die shrink to 32nm that will have 8 cores (16 logical).

I'm planning something similar to yours in the upcoming year, although hopefully not w/ a x58. I still don't see why I'd need 2 video cards, unless this physX thing becomes a worthwhile option. Hopefully I can run my gts into the ground and get a new card after it's EOL'd. :D
Posted on Reply
#23
CDdude55
Crazy 4 TPU!!!
farlex85Yeah as of now the direct memory controller is only for ddr3. The bloomfield cores (the initial nehalems) will all be quad cores that are hyper-threaded (giving them 8 logical cores in windows). Later in 2009 the lower end Havendale cores are to be released which are dual core (4 logical cores in windows). There are others, I think variations after the die shrink to 32nm that will have 8 cores (16 logical).

I'm planning something similar to yours in the upcoming year, although hopefully not w/ a x58. I still don't see why I'd need 2 video cards, unless this physX thing becomes a worthwhile option. Hopefully I can run my gts into the ground and get a new card after it's EOL'd. :D
Thanks for the info.:)

So Windows XP will recognize the new Core i7 CPU's right?
Posted on Reply
#24
farlex85
CDdude55Thanks for the info.:)

So Windows XP will recognize the new Core i7 CPU's right?
I would certainly hope so. :)
Posted on Reply
#25
Siman0
well from rumors iv been hearing is that AMD has hit gold on there next core but that only came from a few people iv talked to probably fan boy's but iv heard all sorts of rumors ranging from HT4, a 16 native processor, even to the extent that they have invested money into 16nm tech and are skipping the rest, and to top it all off iv heard of DDR4 ram and DDR5 on die memory controllers..:twitch:..personalty i think that they are finding some false hope for AMD's processors to come back from the dead or then again it maybe true......ok yeah right :p
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