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News
IBM, Sony, Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. and Toshiba
Unveil Cell Processor (1/12/2004)
Companies Released First Details of Multicore
Chip Comprising Power Architecture and Synergistic Processor
IBM, Sony Corporation, Sony Computer Entertainment
Inc. (Sony Corporation and Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. collectively
referred to as Sony Group) and Toshiba Corporation today unveiled
for the first time some of the key concepts of the highly-anticipated
advanced microprocessor, code-named Cell, they are jointly developing
for next-generation computing applications, as well as digital consumer
electronics.
The four companies also announced that they
would reveal technical details of Cell at the International Solid
State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) to be held from February 6th to
10th, 2005, in San Francisco.
Specifically, the companies confirmed that
Cell is a multicore chip comprising a 64-bit Power processor core
and multiple synergistic processor cores capable of massive floating
point processing. Cell is optimized for compute-intensive workloads
and broadband rich media applications, including computer entertainment,
movies and other forms of digital content.
Other highlights of the Cell processor design
include:
* Multi-thread, multicore architecture. *
Supports multiple operating systems at the same time. * Substantial
bus bandwidth to/from main memory, as well as companion chips. *
Flexible on-chip I/O (input/output) interface. * Real-time resource
management system for real-time applications. * On-chip hardware
in support of security system for intellectual property protection.
* Implemented in 90 nanometer (nm) silicon-on-insulator (SOI) technology.
Additionally, Cell uses custom circuit design
to increase overall performance, while supporting precise processor
clock control to enable power savings.
IBM, Sony Group and Toshiba will disclose
more details about Cell in four technical papers scheduled for presentation
at the International Solid State Circuits Conference.
"Less than four years ago, we embarked on
an ambitious collaborative effort with Sony Group and Toshiba to
create a highly-integrated microprocessor designed to overcome imminent
transistor scaling, power and performance limitations in conventional
technologies," said Dr. John E. Kelly III, senior vice president,
IBM. "Today, we're revealing just a sampling of what we believe
makes the innovative Cell processor a premiere open platform for
next-generation computing and entertainment products."
"Massive and rich content, like multi-channel
HD broadcasting programs as well as mega-pixel digital still/movie
images captured by high-resolution CCD/CMOS imagers, require huge
amount of media processing in real-time. In the future, all forms
of digital content will be converged and fused onto the broadband
network, and will start to explode," said Ken Kutaragi, executive
deputy president and COO, Sony Corporation, and president and Group
CEO, Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. "To access and/or browse sea
of content freely in real-time, more sophisticated GUI within the
3D world will become the 'key' in the future. Current PC architecture
is nearing its limits, in both processing power and bus bandwidth,
for handling such rich applications."
"The progressive breakdown of barriers between
personal computers and digital consumer electronics requires dramatic
enhancements in the capabilities and performance of consumer electronics.
The Cell processor meets these requirements with a multi-processor
architecture/design and a structure able to support high-level media
processing. Development of this unsurpassed, high-performance processor
is well under way, carried forward by dedicated teamwork and state-of-the-art
expertise from Toshiba, Sony Group and IBM," said Mr. Masashi Muromachi,
Corporate Vice President of Toshiba Corporation and President &
CEO of Toshiba's Semiconductor Company. "Today's announcement shows
the substantial progress that has been made in this joint program.
Cell will substantially enhance the performance of broadband-empowered
consumer applications, raise the user-friendliness of services realized
through these applications, and facilitate the use of information-rich
media and communications."
Cell provides a breakthrough solution by
adopting flexible parallel and distributed computing architecture
consisting of independent, multi-core floating point processors
for rich media processing. With the capability to support multiple
operating systems, Cell can perform both PC/WS operating systems
as well as real-time CE/Game operating systems at the same time.
Scalability offered by Cell can be utilized for broader applications,
from small digital CE systems within the home to other entertainment
applications for rendering movies, and to the big science applications
as supercomputers.
A team of engineers from IBM, Sony Group
and Toshiba are collaborating on the design and implementation of
Cell which is expected to deliver vast floating point capabilities,
massive data bandwidth and scalable, supercomputer-like performance.
The design work is taking place at a joint development lab the three
companies established in Austin, Texas, after the project was announced
in 2001.
IBM plans to begin pilot production of Cell
microprocessors at its 300mm wafer fabrication facility in East
Fishkill, NY during the first half of 2005. The first computing
application IBM plans for Cell is the Cell processor-based workstation
it is developing with SCEI.
Sony Corporation expects to launch home servers
for broadband content as well as high-definition television (HDTV)
systems powered by Cell in 2006.
Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. also expects
to launch its next generation computer entertainment system powered
by Cell to revolutionize the experience of computer entertainment.
Toshiba Corporation envisions diverse applications
for Cell and expects to launch its first Cell-based product, a high-definition
television (HDTV), in 2006.
www.ibm.com/chips
www.sony.net
www.toshiba.co.jp/index.htm
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