CSC 456 Spring 2012/ch1 BC

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From 2006-2012 the increase in the number of transistors on a chip has grown from 167 million to 2.6 billion, a 15x increase.

From 2006-2012 the clock frequency has increased from 2.4ghz to 5.2, a 2.2x increase.

IBM now has the 16-core processor Power PC A2, Intel has the 10 core Xeon E7, AMD has the 16 Opteron Interlagos, and Sun has the 8-core Niagara.

Evolution of Intel Processors
From Procs Specifications New Features
1971 4004 740 KHz, 2300 transistors, 10 micrometers, 640B addressable memory, 4 KB program memory
1978 8086 16 bit, 5-10 MHz, 29000 transistors at 3 micrometers, 1MB addressable memory
1982 80286 8-12.5 MHz Virtual memory and protection mode
1985 386 32 bit, 16-33MHz, 275K transistors, 4 GB addressable memory Pipelining
1989 486 25-100MHz, 1.5M transistors FPU integration
1993 Pentium 60-200 MHz On-chip L1 caches and SMP suport
1995 Pentium Pro 16KB L1 caches, 5.5M transistors OOO execution
1997 Pentium MMX 233-450 MHz, 32KB L1 cache, 4.5M transistors Dynamic branch prediction, MMX instruction sets
199 Pentium III 450-1400MHz, 256KB L2 cache on chip, 28M transistors SSE instruction sets
2000 Pentium IV 1.4-3 GHz, 55M transistors Hyperpipelining and SMT
2006 Xeon 64 bit, 2 GHz, 167M transistors, 4MB L2 cache on chip Dual-core and virtualization support
2008 Intel Core i7 64bit, 3.2GHz, 730m transistors, 4 core
2010 Intel Xeon "Nehalem-EX" 64bit, 2.66ghz, 2300m transistors, 8 core
2011 Intel Xeon E7 64bit, 2.67ghz, 2600m transistors, 10 core first Intel chip with 10 processors


z196 4 cores 5.3ghz OOO Superscalar 128kb L1 1.5mb L2 24mb L3 192mb L4 1800 watts

Xeon E 10 cores 2.67ghz SIMD 64kb l1 256kb l2 30mbl3 130W