Intel is well known as the company whose processor chips have largely driven
the hardware side of the PC revolution, but the firm has rarely stood still.
Indeed, with increasingly stiff competition coming from AMD and relative
newcomers such as VIA Technologies, the chip maker has in recent years redoubled
efforts to keep its processors ahead of the game.
Later this year, Intel plans to introduce its latest chip family, known by
the codename
Nehalem.
This flexible design will enable the firm to target market segments from
ultra-portable laptops right through to high-performance servers using the same
basic architecture.
These chips will be followed in the 2009-2010 timeframe by a die-shrink of
Nehalem to a 32nm design, as part of what Intel calls its
tick-tock
lifecycle.
But the firm sees that the broader IT market is also changing, with a greater
emphasis on workforce mobility, while at the same time faster and more pervasive
networks are changing the way IT services are delivered. Like author
Nicholas
Carr, it seems Intel believes that in future, more and more IT functions
will be outsourced to online service providers.
Tom Kilroy, vice president and general manager of Intel’s Digital Enterprise
Group, said that the company is now seeing stronger sales of its technology in
small-to-medium firms, and said that one reason is because of managed services
delivered via the internet.
“Our
vPro
technology was targeted right at large enterprises, but many adopters have also
been service providers. They have been using it to deliver managed services to
customers,” he said.
VPro, which is now in both desktop and laptop platforms from Intel, provides
some management capabilities in the hardware, so that IT support staff can reach
a PC, even if the operating system will not boot.
In future, the technology is set to be extended with other capabilities that
will prove useful for enterprise customers, but which Intel will also add with
an eye to service providers. One of these will be the ability for a user to
remotely call for help if their laptop is causing difficulties, Kilroy said.
“You’ll be able to ping the helpdesk, and they can do a remote diagnosis.
It’s about saving money through not having to do a truck-roll… vPro is lowering
the total cost of ownership through better management,” he said.
Also due to be added to vPro’s feature set is an anti-theft capability,
recently announced at Intel’s developer forum in Shanghai. Little has yet been
disclosed by the company concerning this technology, but it is expected to give
administrators the ability to render a missing or stolen laptop unusable.
“You’ll be able to silently and remotely disable a stolen PC by sending it a
‘kill pill’,” said Kilroy, but he declined to delve any deeper into the
technology, which is set to be introduced by the end of this year.
Back on firmer enterprise territory, Intel is set to introduce a six-core
Xeon chip for servers in the second half of this year. Codenamed Dunnington, the
chip will be aimed at four-socket multi-processor systems.
Dunnington is likely to be the last of the Penryn family of processors to
come to market before the first Nehalem chips appear, but Kilroy dismissed
suggestions that six cores was the limit of what could be achieved with Intel’s
current architecture. Instead, he said it was optimised to hit a sweet-spot in
the market for price and performance.
“It’s about delivering more for a given silicon area, and six core is a nice
price/performance proposition,” he explained.
Nevertheless, Intel expects Nehalem will scale up to deliver server chips
with up to eight cores, while each core will also be capable of executing two
code threads at the same time.
“I don’t currently see any plans for Nehalem beyond eight cores,” Kilroy
said, adding that a four-socket Nehalem system would be capable of handling up
to 64 threads simultaneously.
“It all boils down to what is the optimum level of performance we have to
consider the thermals as well when building these multi-core chips,” he
explained.
Intel has tried multi-threading before, with a feature called
HyperThreading
that it added to Pentium 4 chips. This was meant to boost performance by
allowing a second code thread to make use of processor resources that would
otherwise be sitting idle. However, few applications at the time were written to
use more than a single thread, and so the technology had a mixed reception, with
some users even reporting a drop in performance for some applications.
“What we did with HyperThreading was raise the awareness that you could use
more than one thread,” said Kilroy. “Software developers are now ready to take
full advantage - you will see more uptake on Nehalem than on the P4,” he said.
Nehalem will also mark the transition to Intel’s new QuickPath Interconnect
(QPI) for linking processor chips to each other and to the rest of the computer
system. This provides about 25GB/s bandwidth per link, and along with a
dedicated pool of memory controlled directly by each chip, removes the
bottleneck of all data having to travel along a shared system bus, as it does in
current Intel chips. The technology is similar to the
HyperTransport
used in AMD’s processors.
Kilroy said that moving to QPI will bring Intel’s chips greater flexibility
for handling high-bandwidth applications.
“Today, we have leading performance without an integrated memory controller
thanks to the large cache [on Xeon chips], but we knew we would soon reach a
point of diminishing returns. Now [with Nehalem] we have large cache sizes as
well as an integrated memory controller,” he said.
Such high-bandwidth applications include virtual workloads, a feature that
Intel sees as key, not least because of the importance of this technology in
datacentres. However, Kilroy said the technology should not be equated solely
with server consolidation.
“Virtualisation has been around since the mainframe era, and allows you to
have failover and disaster recovery as well as the optimum way to support
scalable workloads,” he said.
Kilroy pointed to Intel’s FlexMigration technology as a key part of its
virtualisation support. This enables live virtual machines to be moved around a
server farm, regardless of the slight differences between different generations
of Intel server processors.
“If you bought Woodcrest servers in 2006, and you add to them with servers
this year, you will be able to migrate live virtual partitions between them,
allowing firms to pool across different systems,” he explained.
QPI will also feature in Tukwila, the next version of Intel’s Itanium family
of processors, also due by the end of 2008. This is expected to deliver a
significant increase in performance over Montecito, just as that version was
significantly faster than earlier chips.
Kilroy said there was still a place for the Itanium family, despite its not
living up to Intel’s early high expectations. In particular, it is widely used
in mission-critical applications, where a high level of reliability is called
for.
“We’ve seen steady growth in revenue across the mainframe replacement
category,” he said, pointing out that many of the top global stock exchanges use
Itanium-based systems.
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