Intel's Xeon Phi: After Knights Landing Comes Knights Hill
by Ryan Smith on November 18, 2014 10:00 AM ESTAs SC’14 rolls on this week, taking part in the show’s events is Intel, who was at the show to deliver an update on the Xeon Phi lineup. As Intel already delivered a sizable update on Xeon Phi at ISC 2014 earlier this year, their SC’14 announcement is lighter fare, but we now know the name of the next generation of Xeon Phi.
First and foremost, Intel has reiterated that the forthcoming Knights Landing generation of Xeon Phi is still on schedule for H2’15. Built on Intel’s 14nm process, Knights Landing should be a substantial upgrade to the Xeon Phi family by virtue of its integration of Silvermont x86 cores and a new stacked memory technology, Intel & Micron’s MCDRAM.
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Meanwhile Intel also used this occasion to announce the next generation of Xeon Phi. Dubbed Knights Hill, it will be built on Intel’s forthcoming 10nm process technology. Like Intel’s early announcement of Knights Landing, they aren’t discussing the part in any more detail, though they have mentioned that it will use the next generation of their Omni-Path interconnect architecture. Given the use of 10nm and the timing of the Knights Landing launch, this is likely a 2017+ part.
Finally, Intel has also released a bit more information on Omni-Path. Previously announced alongside Knights Landing and newly renamed from Omni-Scale, Intel has announced that Omni-Path will offer link speeds of up to 100Gbps and its companion switch will offer 48 ports. As Intel has positioned Omni-Path as a competitor to Infiniband, at this point Intel is touting that they will be able to offer 56% lower switch fabric latency from the technology, as well as better density and scaling due to the larger number of ports available on the Omni-Path switch (48 vs. 36).
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Source: Intel
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name99 - Tuesday, November 18, 2014 - link
Damn, Charlie Demerjian wasn't kidding...http://semiaccurate.com/2014/11/17/intel-talks-kni...
MadMan007 - Tuesday, November 18, 2014 - link
I read it hoping for something interesting, but expecting the usual empty Charlie drivel. My expectations were met, my hopes were not.nicolapeluchetti - Tuesday, November 18, 2014 - link
There doesn't seem too much to talk about or to be excited about in this anandtech article too, don't you think?TiGr1982 - Tuesday, November 18, 2014 - link
I suppose, the blue label guys does not really disclose any info on next gen of Knights * not because they have nothing to say/show, but because they experience tough competition with green label guys in the field of massively parallel compute accelerators (e.g., first top500 is taken by blue label team for a while, but then follows the green label team). So, Charlie's moronic stream of consciousness does not apply. Intel in total is a multi-billion hi-tech business, and not a hi-tech fair in the first place, after all.mhampton - Wednesday, November 19, 2014 - link
They should have called it Omniknight.