By
Tom Krazit
Monday, January 29 2007 09:24 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,61985321,00.htm
Intel says its 45-nanometer chips are almost ready for prime time.
The company demonstrated PCs and servers running its upcoming
Penryn family of chips this week during a briefing for the press and
analysts on its new transistor design for the 45-nanometer generation. Penryn is
the code name for a family of desktop, notebook and server chips based on
Intel's Core microarchitecture, and systems with the chips will be available
before the end of this year, said CEO Paul Otellini at the event.
Penryn chips will come with the SSE4
instructions Intel announced at the Intel Developer Forum in September, said
Stephen Smith, vice president and director of desktop platform operations. Smith
called the new instructions "the biggest change to our instruction set in about
five years," and said they improve the performance of multimedia applications and technical computing.
The Penryn chips are the first iteration of the new manufacturing
strategy outlined by Otellini earlier this year. Intel wants to introduce
new chip microarchitectures and manufacturing technologies on a regular two-year
cadence, which the company refers to as the "tick-tock" strategy.
Penryn is essentially a shrink of the Core 2
Duo chips, with a few extras like the SSE4 instructions. It's being
introduced along with the new manufacturing technology, the "tick" of Intel's
plans. Then next year, when the 45-nanometer manufacturing technology is mature,
Intel will introduce a new chip microarchitecture code-named Nehalem--the
"tock"--with more significant changes to the chip design.
The rapid cadence is designed to ensure Intel won't get fooled again.
Advanced Micro Devices caught Intel off guard earlier this decade, introducing a
new chip architecture that represented a significant improvement in performance
and power efficiency over Intel's chips at the time. Intel would like to avoid
having to scrap years of
planning again, so it is making smaller changes to its chip blueprints on a
more frequent basis to keep up with the times.
The tide
has started to turn back in Intel's favor with the Core 2 Duo chips. But one
area where Intel has never fallen behind AMD is chip manufacturing.
Intel has been shipping chips based on its 65-nanometer manufacturing
technology since late 2005, while AMD just last month introduced its first
65-nanometer chips. If Intel successfully introduces the Penryn family, it will
have 45-nanometer chips out well before AMD's planned 2008 rollout of similar
chips.
Smaller transistors have lots of benefits. Chip makers can improve
performance by putting more transistors on the same size chip and dial-down
power consumption by getting more work done. There's an economic upside as well,
in that the chips themselves can be made smaller. This allows Intel and AMD to
cut more chips from a single silicon wafer, reducing the cost to build an
individual chip and making investors happy with fatter profit margins.
AMD has outlined plans to try to catch up to Intel, vowing to introduce its
own 45-nanometer chips 18 months after its 65-nanometer chips, instead of the
usual two years. Intel's Penryn demonstration puts additional pressure on that transition.