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Intel Microsoft Windows Businesses Hardware Technology

Intel Drops Thunderbolt 3 Royalty, Adds CPU Integration and Works Closely With Microsoft (windowscentral.com) 107

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Windows Central: Over the last few days, Thunderbolt 3 has been a hot topic amongst Windows users especially with its notable absence with the new Surface Pro and Surface Laptop. Part of the problem is adoption, integration, cost, and consumer confusion according to Microsoft. Intel is aware of the current roadblocks to Thunderbolt 3 implementation, which adds 40Gbps data transfers along with charging and display support for USB Type-C. Today, the company announced numerous changes to its roadmap to speed up its adoption, including: Dropping royalty fees for the Thunderbolt protocol specification starting next year; Integrating Thunderbolt 3 into future Intel CPUs. The good news here is that Intel is dropping many of the roadblocks with today's announcement. By subtracting the licensing costs for Thunderbolt 3 and integrating into the CPU, Intel can finally push mass adoption. Getting back to Microsoft, Intel noted that the two companies are already working closely together with the latest Creators Update bringing more OS support for the protocol. Roanne Sones, general manager, Strategy, and Ecosystem for Windows and Devices at Microsoft added that such cooperation would continue with even more OS-level integration coming down the road.
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Intel Drops Thunderbolt 3 Royalty, Adds CPU Integration and Works Closely With Microsoft

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  • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @04:27PM (#54480279) Homepage Journal
    Who else is Intel "working closely" with?
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @04:28PM (#54480283)

    So the question for someone looking to buy a revised MacBook Pro this year would be, buy it now for a battle-tested Thunderbolt 3 connection, or wait for the chip integration for performance gains even though it will be a fist gen thing next year...

    • I wouldn't wait on integration. Even after it gets integrated into the CPU how long will it take Apple to switch to that CPU model?

      Then how long will it take for them to change motherboards to ones that support on-chip?

      THEN exactly how long will it take until the peripherals perform well enough for it to make a difference?

      Sure it's probably better to have the on-chip version, but the rest of the ducks are going to take their time lining up.

    • by larkost ( 79011 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @04:41PM (#54480375)

      If you are looking for a MacBook Pro with a discrete video card, then I would not wait because of this [1]. Apple has done a lot of work with Intel on integration of the Thunderbolt chips to allow for the mux'ing of the discrete and integrated video streams. My guess is that Apple will continue to use the parts that use the external chips to preserve that work, at least on those computers that have discrete and integrated video parts[2].

      [1] At this point you would have to be nuts to buy any Apple product in the next three weeks. Wait until after Tuesday of WWDC (major stuff is announced Monday, then minor bumps come out on Tuesday), then evaluate what you are going to buy.

      [2] Technically some iMacs have both, but I would exclude them from this list as it is missing this mux'ing system since the screen is only ever driven by the discrete part. There are some decode functions that are used in the integrated part, but that never goes anywhere but back across to main memory.

      • Thanks, with the question I actually meant to compare buying after the imminent update vs next year, not right away. :-)

        Good point about the video aspect, I do need a model with a discrete card (and am really hoping for a boost in that regard in the update).

        • Have a look at a Gigabyte Aero 15. It is about half a pound heavier than a MBP but still pretty light n' thin, and with that you get a GTX 1060. This generation of nVidia mobile cards almost exactly match their desktop counterparts specs wise, so that's a lot of dGPU power.

          • Although I appreciate the thought (I would dearly love the GTX or any nVidia chipset), I need a Mac as most of my work is IOS related and while I'd be OK with a hackintosh as a desktop, I can't go that way for a laptop...

            I'm hoping they switch chipsets for the update having come to there senses that a lot of devs wan nViidea chips, we'll see.

            Also can't really do heavier as I travel a lot, already debated downsizing to a 13" or Air, and getting a desktop (but then it probably would be a Hackintosh deal so I

    • "Buy now or wait for something better" is a dilemma faced by anyone who has ever bought any computer.

      • Yes, but... this adds one more potential brick on the side of waiting if it would help improve system performance for those using Thunderbolt 3 for heavy I/O (like an external storage device striping together a few SSD's). That's the main thing I was wondering about missing out on, beyond all the usual points about storage and processor and GPU increasing in speed.

        It sounds like it's not significant enough to wait on if you were thinking about buying one of the updated MacBook Pro models due to come out so

        • This won't ripple through the Apple hardware product line for a year or more. Just buy This Year's Model [youtube.com] and deal with it. Your PC-using friends will be polite enough not to say much about it to you.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Out of interest, what do you want Thunderbolt for? The only really useful thing I can see is external PCIe for a GPU or some other high bandwidth card... But such a machine would be stuck with a mobile CPU and mobile thermal limits, so even then only useful for some fairly niche applications.

      For everything else USB 3 has plenty of bandwidth.

    • by sudon't ( 580652 )

      So the question for someone looking to buy a revised MacBook Pro this year would be, buy it now for a battle-tested Thunderbolt 3 connection, or wait for the chip integration for performance gains even though it will be a fist gen thing next year...

      This is always the question, right? Whether to wait for new tech, or buy now, has been a consideration since at least 1986, when I first started buying them, (I decided to wait because, c’mon, expandable to 4 MB of RAM? Hell, yeah!). But, over time, I decided that, whenever I need a new machine to just go out and get it. Otherwise, you’ll be waiting forever, because there’s always something better coming.

  • Finally!, now hopefully a simple box consisting of a PCIE -> TB3 interface and a cheapo PSU will cost less than $299.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    So now instead of a premium product thunderbolt is free and integrated.... as long as you are using an intel cpu. Of course AMD won't be able to add it to their CPUs. So the pending Ryzen mobiles will either have to do without or pay for the space, power, and expense of a discrete chip.

    • by Guspaz ( 556486 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @04:40PM (#54480361)

      With the protocol now being royalty-free, what's stopping AMD from adding it to their CPUs?

      • Being "royalty free" can mean different things, so I checked the source [intel.com], which is quite explicit about this point:

        In addition to Intel's Thunderbolt silicon, next year Intel plans to make the Thunderbolt protocol specification available to the industry under a nonexclusive, royalty-free license. Releasing the Thunderbolt protocol specification in this manner is expected to greatly increase Thunderbolt adoption by encouraging third-party chip makers to build Thunderbolt-compatible chips.

        So yeah, seems there shouldn't be any legal reasons preventing AMD to implement it.

        • by Mousit ( 646085 )
          Even if there was some sort of catch that prevents AMD from integrating it directly into their CPUs, that press release explicitly states Intel wants third-party chipset makers producing TB chips. So if nothing else, you could expect to see such chipsets showing up on AMD-supporting motherboards.
      • Time. Chances are that Intel will have on-CPU TB3 out at least one generation ahead of AMD because they probably had a head start on the integration work. This might be part of Intel's response to Zen turning out much better than AMD's last few architectures. Zen has USB 3.1 so Core having TB3 might be a reasonable answer to that.
        • by Kartu ( 1490911 )

          They have invented the damned thing, what "being ahead on integration" are you taking about, son?

          Interesting is to know the practical downsides of connecting TB via PCIe lanes, as oppossed to "In CPU".

          Heck, the best part about TB for me is the symmetric port.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Hopefully common sense. It's a gaping security hole.

      • Royalty-free just means no per device cost.  May be there is a one time cost? or something else.
        • by Guspaz ( 556486 )

          AMD is a big company, and even if there were up-front costs, that wouldn't be an obstacle. Intel explicitly said this move is intended to get TB3 in third-party chips:

          In addition to Intel’s Thunderbolt silicon, next year Intel plans to make the Thunderbolt protocol specification available to the industry under a nonexclusive, royalty-free license. Releasing the Thunderbolt protocol specification in this manner is expected to greatly increase Thunderbolt adoption by encouraging third-party chip makers to build Thunderbolt-compatible chips. We expect industry chip development to accelerate a wide range of new devices and user experiences.

          https://newsroom.intel.com/editorials/envision-world-thunderbolt-3-everywhere/

  • We Linux users LOVE it (sarcasm) when chip companies like Intel-everyone become best buds with Micro$hit. Thank god for Windblow$ 10 for allowing "GNU/NT" (Linux emulator) on its system, because you know, it's the same thing as actual Linux -_-. If we can crack Chrimebooks (Get it? No desktop, so no privacy), I'm sure we can crack this too.
    • Intel does care about Linux. Unlike AMD or Nvidia, they directly contribute to MESA and make a free software graphics driver that actually works without major issues. And about Thunderbolt, they actually submitted a large patchset to lkml a few days ago.

    • lamer
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The Linux VM for Windows is strange. It seems like it's just a VM, nothing else. You could never actually use it to say, use the bash shell with the windows file system in a unix-style manner.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      The website it is sourced from simply hugely biased the story to M$, who are providing nothing, basically just another company accessing the now royalty free hardware design. M$ will of course shit on about not providing thunderbolt to older versions of windows, as far as they are concerned either pay for the probe or fuck off. Intel will of course make the driver directly accessible but in the end by far the majority of thunderbolt connections will be android, then apple and then windows anal probe 10 in t

      • So, it's just a clever ad made to look like news. By the way, I'm testing elinks with Slashdot, so hopefully this will show up.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @05:07PM (#54480533)

    Just another step towards locking out any OS but Windows 10, including locking out older versions of Windows. Either that, or badly cripple the few OS's that do still run on it, likely requiring approval by MS in order to get their boot loader signed for UEFI Secure Boot.

    And right while people are finding out that even Enterprise edition Windows 10 [theinquirer.net] refuses to stop talking to external servers (including ad servers), even though companies pay through the nose for this specific version of Windows so that they can prevent just that sort of thing.

    Make no mistake about it. Microsoft wants to own your computer, and intends on leaving you no choice in the matter, except perhaps not to own a computer at all. We're going to be seeing a lot worse coming down the pike very shortly at this rate.

  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @05:37PM (#54480715)
    Nobody wants cables to be expensive - cables are expendable goods, prone to mechanical wear out, and you need to have a lot of them to be prepared for many situations, some of which might never occur.
    A connector standard that requires expensive active electronics as an integral part of any cable is sure to fail with regards to mass market penetration.
    • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

      I don't see how you can get the data rates and power delivery capabilities of TB3 without an active cable. Unless it's a very very short cable. Seems like a price worth paying for one-cable-to-rule-them-all type situations.

      My biggest beef is that they didn't go with a mag-connector for USB-C. Seems like an oversight to me.

      • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
        You could always specify a connector using a multi-mode optical fiber. As you can see from the almost zero prices of (even longer) TOSlink cables, such cables are very cheap - and there almost no limits to the data rates possible on optical fibers.
        The problem with Thunderbolt is that they wanted to make the ports cheap and burden the price X times on the buyer of the cables, later. Won't fly.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          As you can see from the almost zero prices of (even longer) TOSlink cables, such cables are very cheap -

          TOSlink is a crap plastic based fiber, that exists for cheaply/lazily removing ground loops, not for high data rates. There is a reason 1+ Gbps fibers are glass, and not displaced by dirt cheap plastic fibers.

          there almost no limits to the data rates possible on optical fibers.

          When there are high loses and dispersion, you will quickly hit a data rate limit...

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The issue with optical cables is that they don't like being bent too much. People will expect to be able to wrap and bundle them like they can with USB cables.

          Also, the cost of optical cables that can carry tens of gigabits per second is much higher than TOSlink which is under megabits, i.e. several orders of magnitude lower.

      • My biggest beef is that they didn't go with a mag-connector for USB-C. Seems like an oversight to me.

        Probably because having the cable fall out when you look at it the wrong way is several orders of magnitude more annoying when it stops actual functionality, as opposed to simply reverting to battery power.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      No it doesn't. Active cables are required for if you want to run at 40Gb/s on a cable longer than 1.5 feet. If can accept lower speeds, however, or short distances passive cables are standard compliant.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I bet this protocol is so fucking horrid it makes USB (another Intel 'standard') look fun by comparison.

    • by willy_me ( 212994 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @06:54PM (#54481057)
      USB 3.1 - Type C also requires active cables when going over 10'. Then there are cables for Apple iDevices that also happen to be active without costing a mint. I do not think Thunderbolt 3 will require outrageously expensive cables in the long term. Right now? Sure, but that is because demand is still quite low.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        They should just use USB C cables. They have the bandwidth and the USB C standard supports using the ports to carry other signals in a safe, compatible way. It could also allow peripherals to be multi-mode, USB and Thunderboilt.

  • I've seen plenty of wars over which standard comes to dominate. Beta-VHS, MS-keyboard vs USB (initially), SCSI vs. RS-232 (as a philosophical choice of parallel vs serial). But I don't understand this one.

    Why competition between Thunderbolt 3 and USB-C? Aren't they nominally identical in all respects? Or are they exactly identical (?), in which case I am exposing my ignorance.

    • Re:Standards wars (Score:5, Informative)

      by imgod2u ( 812837 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @05:49PM (#54480775) Homepage

      USB-C is the connector type, not the protocol. Thunderbolt 3 is the protocol. All current Thunderbolt 3 implementations use USB-C as the connector type. Not all USB-C connectors attach to devices that support the Thunderbolt 3 protocol. It's essentially 1 cable/connector that supports many different protocols (USB 3.1, Ethernet, Thunderbolt 3, DisplayPort, etc).

  • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @06:49PM (#54481035) Homepage Journal

    Is this still architected so that anybody who can stick a cable in the side of your computer can suck down its memory contents?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      There is an MMU which is supposed to manage the DMA and could in theory prevent these kinds of attack, but at the moment it isn't used like that and even if it was the implementation would be vulnerable to attack. This is Intel, the guys being the Management Engine fiasco that they were warned about for years, so security isn't very high up their list.

  • Screw Microsoft in the ass. Why are they not working closely with Redhat and the Linux Kernel Developers?

    • I would rather Microsoft's only contact with Red Hat be through the Linux Kernel Developers who happen to work for Red Hat.

  • how many buses and will severs be stuck with lowend video on die to drive this?

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