Intel will continue with its efforts to enhance the graphics capabilities of
its CPUs, but the chip maker will not release a "Larrabee"-like
discrete graphics processor any time soon.
In a Technology@Intel
blog post May 25, Intel spokesperson Bill Kircos said the company will
increase spending and manpower in the area of graphics, and hinted at a new
effort born out of the Larrabee program and Intel's efforts in many-core CPU
technologies that will focus on the HPC (high-performance
computing) and supercomputing spaces.
However, company officials are not making any effort in the
short term to revive the Larrabee project itself. Larrabee was a discrete
graphics chip due out in early 2010. However, Intel
shelved the project in December 2009, referring to development issues involving
the processor, which the company had been talking about since 2007.
After Intel ditched Larrabee, industry analysts said it would
be difficult for Intel or any other company to bring a new graphics technology
to market, and that the end of Larrabee wasn't going to be the
end of Intel's graphics efforts.
Both Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, with its ATI
unit, are pushing their GPU products for more general-purpose computing
workloads, particularly in the HPC space,
where more applications can take advantage of the parallel processing
capabilities of the graphics chips.
IBM on May 18 unveiled a version
of its iDataPlex
HPC server that offers Intel CPUs and Nvidia GPUs in the same system,
making it the first top-tier OEM to sell such a hybrid system.
Intel officials have said that their CPUs, with integrated
graphics technology, can handle the bulk of consumer and corporate graphics
needs in clients and servers. In his blog, Kircos reiterated that point.
"Our top priority continues to be ... delivering an
outstanding processor that addresses everyday, general-purpose computer needs
and provides leadership visual computing experiences via processor
graphics," Kircos wrote. "We are further boosting funding and
employee expertise here, and continue to champion the rapid shift to mobile
wireless computing and HD [high-definition] video—we are laser-focused on these
areas."
Driving the demand for greater graphics capabilities are the
growth of HD video and the "rapid shift to wireless mobile computers that
consume less power," he wrote.
Throughout the blog entry, Kircos didn't address the gaming space,
in which both AMD and Nvidia are active.
The current 2010 Core PC chips include integrated Intel HD
Graphics, "a best-in-class solution for the vast majority of how we all
use our computers. If you choose our processors, you get a great visual experience
for the bulk of what you do. We've even added entirely new features, such as
Wireless Display right to your TV," Kircos wrote.
Those graphics capabilities will be enhanced with the upcoming
"Sandy Bridge"
family of Core processors, due out in early 2011.
In the server space, Kircos spoke briefly about "a
business opportunity derived from the Larrabee program and Intel research in
many-core chips. This server product line expansion is optimized for a broader
range of highly parallel workloads in segments such as high-performance
computing."
Kirk Skaugen, vice president of the Intel architecture group
and general manager of its data center unit, will provide an update of the
effort at the International Supercomputing show in Hamburg,
held May 30 to June 3.