Showing posts with label intel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label intel. Show all posts

Friday, 28 September 2012

New processor designs boost graphics to speed up Windows

New processor designs boost graphics to speed up Windows:


New processors from AMD and Intel will provide the horsepower for next generation desktop applications, that could previously only run on specialist workstations.

Integrated chips used to be the poor cousins of dedicated systems. PC manufacturers offered low-cost PC hardware – with integrated sound and video chips – that were lower cost than machines equipped with dedicated audio and video hardware.


But these integrated devices balanced cost with performance, and it was the performance that often suffered as a result of design compromises.

The industry has moved on and the integrated chip design, now called System on a Chip (SoC), is set to provide processing, graphics and multimedia in the next generation of PC and hybrid PC/tablet devices.

Intel's approach is called IntelHD, which offers built in graphics, although its performance is inferior to dedicated graphics processors (GPU) according to industry benchmarks. 

The company did attempt to develop its own GPU, code-named Larrabee, but this project has been dropped. However, the latest Atom SoC design, the z2760, which will power the new Dell, Fujitsu, HP Asus and Acer Windows 8 Pro tablets, uses the Imagination PowerVR graphics core chip to improve graphics.

In its market trends report for electronic equipment published in July 2012, analyst Gartner noted that graphics processing units (GPUs), digital signal processors (DSPs) and other specialised cores will take centre stage in future SoC designs. 

“The importance of multimedia content to a broad variety of electronic equipment makes the ability to manage the presentation of the content critical. For most processor architectures, this is now handled by a graphics processing core that manages the resolution and the quality of the images rendered.” 

Integrating the GPU onto a SoC design will enhance the performance in future application processor units, according to Gartner.

This is exactly what AMD has been developing since it acquired graphics card maker ATI, in 2006. 

“We put a GPU right beside a CPU core," says Adam Kozak, AMD client desktop product marketing manager. "We are implementing AES encryption (256-bit), up to four processor cores,and HT7000 graphics, all on a single chip.” 

According to Kozak, graphics processing is the chipmaker's strongest area. He says the design philosophy of the company is to concentrate on developing high-performance chips at a low cost.

The latest so-called APU chip provides 4.2GHz on the CPU, 8GHz on the GPU, which, according to AMD's data, is capable of delivering 736 GFlops.

But does a PC need all this processing power, just to run Windows 8?  

Kozak believes so. Microsoft is using its DirectX graphics interfaces to speed-up rendering of the Windows 8 user interface and Office 12 also makes use of graphics acceleration. He says that in Windows 8, the AMD processor can display three monitors from a single chip, without the need for additional graphics cards.

There is growing interest in using the powerful GPU in a PC to run supercomputer-like applications. In fact, graphics card maker Nvidia has developed Cuda (Compute Unified Device Architecture), an architecture for running computationally intensive applications on the multiple cores in its high-performance graphics card family.

But Cuda is proprietary to Nvidia. Kozak says the new Microsoft  DirectCompute programming platform will enable application developers to target the CPU and the GPU in standard way, not just on Nvidia GPUs. This will mean applications can take advantage of the raw processing power available on the high performance GPU core that now resides in the AMD SoC designs.

As an alternative to Microsoft DirectCompute, applications can also use the OpenCL programming interfaces, which effectively does the same thing. Image-processing applications like Adobe Photoshop use OpenCL to boost performance of computationally intensive graphics rendering tasks. Kozak says the OpenCL architecture can also be used in more mainstream applications, like Winzip, for speeding up the compression and decompression of zip files.

Wednesday, 18 July 2012

HAPPY BIRTHDAY INTEL

HAPPY BIRTHDAY INTEL...!!




Intel was founded in Mountain View, California on july 18, 1968 by Gordon E. Moore ( a chemist and physicist), Robert Noyce (a physicist and co-inventor of the integrated circuit), and Arthur Rock (investor and venture capitalist).

Moore and Noyce came from Fairchild Semiconductor and were Intel's first two employees.

The total initial investment in Intel was $2.5 million
convertible debentures and $10,000
from Rock.

Moore and Noyce initially wanted to
name the company "Moore Noyce". The name, however, was a partial homophone for "more noise" – an ill- suited name for an electronic company.

Instead they used the name NM Electronics for almost a year, before deciding to call their company Integrated Electronics or "Intel" for short.

Intel was the first company to come up with a microprocessor chip:the famous Intel 4004.

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

How to Install a Desktop Processor


How to Install a Desktop Processor?



A computer isn't a computer without a processor, so that's rightfully where system building and upgrading usually start. If you're looking for a faster, more powerful, and more feature-rich PC, you're going to want the best processor you can get your hands on. That doesn't always mean the most expensive, but it means doing a little bit of research.






Installing a processor may seem daunting, but it's not really that difficult. The basic process is always four steps (open the socket, install the processor, close the socket, then install the necessary heat sink), but the details differ depending on whether you're using an AMD or an Intel CPU, and what model it is. Luckily, whichever kind of processor you have, you can install it in your motherboard in just a few minutes—and although you'll want to be careful while doing so, the process isn't even that complicated.


What follows are steps for installing processors in the current most popular motherboard sockets on the market: Intel's LGA1155 (mainstream) and LGA2011 (high-end), and AMD. Because we're assuming a from-scratch build, we're not including extensive information here about performing upgrades, but we'll pepper in a few words about it when it's appropriate.

Monday, 11 June 2012