Clearspeed Makes Tall Claims for Future Chip 254
Josuah writes "ClearSpeed Technology announced today a new multithreaded array processor named the CS301. Their press release states the chip can achieve 25Gflops for only 3W of power. New Scientist and TechNewsWorld have articles on this chip, each with more information about the chip. I wondering if this is too good to be true." The key phrase is in the Wired story: "Soon to be in prototype, the chip...". "Soon to be in prototype" is synonymous with "does not exist".
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
And, in yet another article, the Mozilla team announced that version 2 of...
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Soon to be in PROTOTYPE?? (Score:1)
It would be interesting though.
Two words (Score:2)
Soon to be in prototype. (Score:1)
Oh, right on. It's about time someone started developing a mass-market Loch Ness monster.
So theoretically... (Score:1)
Re:So theoretically... (Score:2)
Some of the special-purpose GPUs can probably make this claim. "We can do 1TFlop...as long as it consists only of function X." Sun's MAJC was advertised as doing 6GFlops for two cores four years ago, so scaling something similar to 1TFlop today doesn't seem to be totally out of reach (40 CPUs would probably do it).
If I have the physics right... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:If I have the physics right... (Score:2)
Re:If I have the physics right... (Score:2)
"Soon to be in prototype" (Score:5, Informative)
-psy
Thing is (Score:3, Insightful)
There has been more than one firm that has suffered from simulator disease. They get all caught up in making an awesome, ass-kicking theoritical design that will eclipse everything and ever
Re:Thing is (Score:2)
I'm lucky if I can get my VHDL for FPGA and CPLD designs working to start with, let alone create silicon I can't actually pseudo-fab
-psy
"enables nanotech research" (Score:2)
I bet it might hit 25 gigaflops with an "optimized demonstration algorithm" with no cache misses, no branch misses, and heck, all the data is in the registers at all times, so it doesn't even wait for the cache.
Re:"enables nanotech research" (Score:2)
Let's see - a 64-bit 66Mhz PCI bus (the maximum the PCI standard allows and, well, not exactly common on PC motherboards, shall we say?) will supply a maximum of 133megawords per second. So a 25Gflop processor will receive one word of data from the system memory every four *h
Re:"Soon to be in prototype" (Score:2)
Quantum effects are what you get with such small transistors, and the interactions are a lot harder to predict than is, for instance, the adherence of a transistor to it's response curve.
You can do an okay job, yes, but that doesn't mean that the thing is going to pos
MS Windows announced 1984; works 1993 (Score:2)
I am skeptical (Score:2)
This is true iff the chip is using standard/existing fabrication tools, processes and development/layout tools. Looking at the articles, it seems like the chip is designed using traditional methods, so except for the "ClearConnect Bus", there doesn't seem to be any ground breaking technology. I would be interested in seeing how a packet based network linking 64, 32 bit processors would be implemented on a standard piece of silicon.
From this chip's perspective I would like to understand how data
Re:I am skeptical (Score:2)
Are you questioning the PCI bus's ability to shovel enough data to these chips?
(For those who didn't read the WiReD article, the company mentions "PCI supercomputer" cards).
-psy
P.S: You still in Toronto?
Re:I am skeptical (Score:2)
Yessir, still in Toronto, survived the provincial election, prepared t
Re:"Soon to be in prototype" (Score:2)
Re:"Soon to be in prototype" (Score:2)
-psy
Re:"Soon to be in prototype" (Score:2)
I'm not justifying their claims
-psy
Key phrase? (Score:2)
No, the key phrase is this is too good to be true
Co processor (Score:1, Insightful)
It's not replacing our current processors. It is just helping them with intensive floating-point calculations. Is that really going to be helpful to the average user? Keith
Re:Co processor (Score:3, Insightful)
Everything old is new again... eventually.
From reading the articles, it seems it is indeed designed to be a math coprocessor. Since the Pentium came out, those have been out of style. The Pentium effectively included a 80487 on the same die, and on other architectures that was done even earlier. But now it comes back - only now the idea is a far more powerful coprocessor for scientific functions.
No, it's not going to be very helpful to the average users. But for those of us that spend a lot of time usin
Re:Co processor (Score:2)
ClearSpeed is saying that it can run as a coprocessor, but also standalone. From their press release:
"The CS301 can serve either as a co-processor alongside an Intel or AMD CPU within a high performance workstation, blade server or cluster configuration, or as a standalone processor for embedded DSP applications like radar pulse compression or image processing."
Re:Co processor (Score:2)
Either that - or it will help me become #1 on seti@home's list of data crunchers....
Seems obvious. (Score:1)
I thinking it is!
Re:Seems obvious. (Score:2)
Skeptical (Score:5, Funny)
25Gflops on 3W? That must be some unorthodox technology at work there. Anyone hear anything about some research corporation finding an amazing processor in a robot from the future?
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
if you have only one possible flop(floating point op? i dunno, i've never bothered to check on these usually fairy tale figures beyond bogomips).
for example, you can only add 0.001 to 0.001, but you can do that 25 000 000 000 times a second..
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Don't be silly, that's just a movie. It was found at Roswell.
(or the MiB need more budget - oops I'm guilty too)
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
It's a very power efficient way to run these kinds of applications.
Do a google search on the Stanford Imagine project for some academic background.
Re:Skeptical (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
More likely, it only uses 3W while in the low power mode, making no calculations or some such... :-)
Kirby
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Coprocessor Price (Score:1)
But where's the desktop bus bandwidth supposed to come from? I Think it'll choke on my PC133 RAM. Whatever desktop machine they're targeting is what I want for Christmas.
Re:Coprocessor Price (Score:2)
Putting around 20 ClearSpeed chips into a few personal computers could potentially provide the sort of power normally only found in a supercomputer built from hundreds of parallel processors or specialised hardware.
Yea, that's right. A $16,000 comodity processor.
echoes of Transmeta (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, it sounds like wishful thinking. I have little faith in processors from unknown companies that claim to do what Intel, AMD and IBM combined haven't yet been able to achieve.
Re:echoes of Transmeta (Score:2)
Really? From what I've read they delivered on everything they said they would/could do. What didn't they deliver on and where was it said they did something that didn't materialize?
I'm not trolling here, I just curious.
Re:echoes of Transmeta (Score:2)
I've yet to see a Transmeta box in action, but I know their chips were in some of the first blade systems a year or two ahead of HP's or any other major manufacturers. You definitely can't deny that they've been successful.
Maybe I'm a tech optimist, but I'd be willing to put money on Clearspeed's technology. It sounds cool to bo
Who's got the thermodynamics degree? (Score:2)
So, in that kind of light, can anybody here with thermodynamic knowledge compare the total number of phase changes required for this speed versus the energy which has been claimed it n
Re:Who's got the thermodynamics degree? (Score:2)
I couldn't find any number on the web.
Mark
Re:Who's got the thermodynamics degree? (Score:2)
Admitted Vapour ware... (Score:2)
Slow news day I guess...
Re:Admitted Vapour ware... (Score:2)
Pretty good but not amazing..... (Score:2)
Re:Pretty good but not amazing..... (Score:2)
A DSP is just not comparable to a desktop CPU, and I didn't see anything which suggests this thing can do more.
25 GFLOPs of performance and 2 x 1.6 GB/sec bus (Score:2, Insightful)
Unless this thing is working on highly specialized data sets, it doesn't matter how much data the core can mow through if it can't get the data fast enough. Why do you think AMD and Intel are so obsessed with their memory interfaces? There's little difference between the Athlon and the Athlon 64 besides large data width and fancy memory / SMP interfaces.
Re:25 GFLOPs of performance and 2 x 1.6 GB/sec bus (Score:2)
The individual throughput this chip has is good enough for each unit, and the more processing we can do on the audio, the better. We've already looked at this product, however, and determined that until it is available and selling well for 1 year we can't trust the company to not disappear.
Because of that, we usually end up with a
I don't know... (Score:2)
Knight Rider, a shadowy flight into the dangerous world of a man who will soon be in prototype.
Maspar (Score:5, Interesting)
The basic idea is to have lots of "processing elements" that are basically ALUs with a bit of additional smarts (for branches mainly). Each PE has its own memory. The main processor (probably not the PC CPU) tells each PE what to do. Thus the Single Instruction Multiple Data. Things are a bit more complex then this (branches, pointers, and a few other things cause some problems.) but not too much worse. PE to PE communication is also interesting (the Maspar was a toroid as I recall).
The two basic problems with this type of a design are:
There are also a huge number of other problems. Caches don't generally do a darn thing for massive SIMD computers (if one processing element misses, they all do.) The memory usually has two types of pointers (one to the PE memory and one to global memory). I may contact the company to see if they want to hire a short-term consultant. hummm.... Have PhD will travel?
Re:Maspar (Score:2)
Mark
unfortunately for them... (Score:2, Funny)
Doesn't the Phantom... (Score:2)
Onyxruby's law (Score:4, Funny)
The amount of hype per inch produced by marketing doubles every 18 months.
With apologies to Moore
Re:Onyxruby's law (Score:2)
not very impressive (Score:2)
When they have a device that delivers 200 GFLOPS with 64 threads, then I'll be interested.
Re:not very impressive (Score:2)
Computation bottleneck (Score:2)
You can certainly throw a bunch of ALUs on a grid (it's not so difficult) and claim GIPS, GFLOPS or whatever ... but you won't get similar spee
A point to consider (Score:2)
Typo In Story Title (Score:2, Funny)
Vapor... or not? (Score:2)
That page also has a PDF of their presentation at the 2003 Microprocessor Forum. Whether this technology will pan out is a matter for the markets, but ClearSpeed isn't loo
in other news (Score:2)
Oi! (Score:2)
If you build it, will they come? (Score:2)
Getting data in and out fast enough to feed the thing will be a problem. It will probably only achieve its rated speed when it's working intensively on small data sets. That's a typical DSP application. This might be a useful part for a software radio. They mention radar applications, which are basically software radios.
That ratio of MFLOPS/watt would help for graphics proce
I'll be back(ing... over my dog) (Score:2, Funny)
Plausible (Score:3, Interesting)
Some of the hardware design came from from engineers in Bristol, UK. Companies like Division and INMOS (anyone remember the T800 and T9000 transputer and a Microway board for parallel computing on a PC board more than a decade ago?). The other half of the design team came from UNC computer graphics lab in Chapel Hill. From the well known PixelFlow and PixelPlane machines. That along with a Taiwanese fab plant that would produce these SIMD processors with extra PE (SIMD Processor Engines) that would compensate for the manufacturing errors. eg. Lets say the chip would have 100 PEs so they would manufacture it 120 PEs. Those that didn't work they'd switch off and they wouldn't have to throw away the entire chip.
The story of PixelFusion was unfortunate. They could have rocked the computer graphics world with their scalable tile based rendering technology and efficient manufacturing methods. The programmable PEs would be able to handle both Direct X and Open GL. I suppose now they are trying to focus their investment and IP into more generic applications. I find their claims to be plausible because they have demonstrated innovative chips in the past.
My 2 cents
Re:Good points ! Link for you. (Score:2, Informative)
graphics cards as general processors [gpgpu.org]
Um, guys? It's 25GFLOPS, not 25GHZ! (Score:2, Informative)
I'm not certain, but I thought I ran across similar number crunching capabilities in Integer OPS. It seems to me to have been in regards to fibre fabric and switching.
Or I could be on cra
200 MHz is slow in a 3 GHz world (Score:2)
Re:200 MHz is slow in a 3 GHz world (Score:2)
Unusual Scepticism, and Transmeta (Score:2)
I wonder how many people work for Slashdot and own shares in Transmeta, which is coming out with the TM8000 right now, and is announcing earnings tomorrow. Full disclosure: I own Transmeta shares too.
Now, usually Slashdot greets these RSN products with glee and neglects to mention that they are vapor. Not this time, nosiree. Why? Because if it were true it would compete with Transmeta.
Not accusing anybody of anything wrong here... just... well... I've drawn my conclusions. You draw yours.
Price per flop VS Mac G5... (Score:2)
I don't have a question on how these chips will plug in. Most likely their card will contain 2-8 of these chips, plus a controller and specialized RAM, all interconnected by their proprietary bus (mentioned in the press release). It will do a large chunk of the processing in isolation from the CPU and oth
not too good to be true (Score:2)
A BLITTER CHIP BY ANY OTHER NAME.... (Score:2)
Premature... (Score:3, Interesting)
With a working prototype they still have not much.
With a working, and cost-efficient manufacturing process, they have something.
When there are compilers that actually can use this kind of thing, it starts to be somthing that is real.
My guess is they are about a decade from a reliable, usable and cheap product. Suddenly these numbers do not sound impressive at all...
What about memory bandwidth? (Score:3, Interesting)
It seems like putting one of these cards in a PC with today's technology would be like sticking a mainframe behind a 300 baud connection: sure it can handle millions of transactions a second, but you'll never actually see that kind of throughput because memory is so slow.
Not a lot of RTFA happening... (Score:3, Informative)
1. The chip is fully programmable and an SDK invluding C compiler is available now.
2. The chip will be marketed as a coprocessor.
3. They expect to start selling them for around $16,000 in a few months.
ExtremeTech had the story since this AM (Score:2)
Not surprising (Score:2)
Slide show from ClearSpeed (Score:2)
It is a SIMD machine. It looks like they've put some real thought into the software, which is the hard part in something like this. The debugger certainly looks pretty.
The ported C code on slide 13 is a bit scary. The intermediate language appears to rely on the compiler to distribute the workload to the PEs (otherwise why is t
Re:Slide show from ClearSpeed (Score:2)
Really? I didn't see anything about such special hardware. Could you point it out to me?
Re:Who needs that much speed anyway? (Score:1)
Remember the days when people in the industry made statements such as "512kb of RAM should be more that enough for anyone"? That was about a decade ago. Just wait a few years.
Re:I remember the quotes of 256KB of ram and 10MB( (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe if we decide to model "Life, the Universe and Everything?"
No, just modelling the surf breaking on a beach would need several beowulf clusters of these chips. Or the flow of gas through an airplane turbine. Or the weather in a small region of planet Earth. There are many simulations of non-linear systems whose simulation require a lot more CPU power than is likely to be available on the near future.
And what about the human brain itself? Our current computers are s
Re:Who needs that much speed anyway? (Score:1)
It IS going to be used, real soon too!! (Score:2)
Re:Who needs that much speed anyway? (Score:2)
No need for multitasking when you got DOS 3.0
Re:Who needs that much speed anyway? (Score:2)
Re:Old US GOVT Black Ops Technology (Score:2, Funny)
Ordinary x86 by day, but SuperComputer by night. I wonder what the theme song will be...
What I'm saying is... (Score:2)
Well, actually I work for the contractor that provides information systems to the DoD, IRS, Customs, Coast Guard, etc.
Honest to god... it's bunk. Paranoid ramblings.
COTS is the big push, or big iron. You have to realize that the end users are not that bright. They pay us to figure out what can make it simplest.
Put a card in each persons' machine? SUPPORT NIGHTMARE. Not going to happen. They want us to deliver "something", a nice packaged-up solution. Usually it's based off comm
Re:64 parallel FPUs (Score:2)
You've obviously never done graphics or sound pipeline programming.
Re:Chip Multithreading is all the rage now... (Score:2)
While obviously true, it means very little in practice. Mostly, tasks that take a lot of time are easily converted to pa
Re:Chip Multithreading is all the rage now... (Score:2)
For the current generation of typical computers, 50, 100, or 300 processors is still a lot more than what is common. Mostly, it is 1. Meaning we still have quite a lot of speedup to gain before Amdahls law makes it all worthless.
Systems with more than 1 processor today are usually servers or running other kinds of easily paralellizable processes.
The main reason most of todays systems avoid having too many processors is probably not Amdahls law. My g
Re:Math intensive... ? (Score:2)
Uh, what would you expect. When "cutting edge" eventually gets affordable, don't you suspect that someone would offer something a little bit faster that costs just a few hundred times more?
Considered the length of the grant-cycle I usually have outdated technology... I suppose if this sort of technology becomes the leader, I would still have to have the resources of a large research university to get anything done. At least the way it is n