HardwareHeaven.com

HardwareHeaven.com

Looking for the skin chooser?
 
 
  • Home

  • Hardware reviews

  • Articles

  • News

  • Tools

  • Gaming at HardwareHeaven

  • Forums

 

Go Back   HardwareHeaven.com > Forums > News > Other Tech News


Other Tech News The latest community based technology news from across the globe. (If you aren't a community newsposter then use the "Submit News" section.)

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old Feb 7, 2006, 01:17 AM   #1
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Iria's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 7,275
Rep Power: 89
Iria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seenIria has a divinity and aura the likes we have never seen

Quest for power control moves beyond the chip

Intel is working on two new manufacturing and design techniques to improve its transistors' power efficiency and reduce power consumption of a system's motherboard, the company's CTO said Monday.

One technique involves dedicating a voltage supply for both the CPU (central processing unit) and the cache memory. The other integrates voltage regulators onto transistors to improve efficiency, Justin Rattner, chief technology officer and a senior fellow with the company, said in a keynote address at the DesignCon 2006 conference.

The introduction of Intel's 90-nanometer manufacturing technology in 2003 made the world's largest chipmaker realize it had to do something to get control of the mushrooming power consumption of its processors. The Prescott Pentium 4 processor released in early 2004 consumed more than 100 watts of power at maximum performance, and plans were in place to go even further, Rattner said.

"We thought at the time we could approach 200 watts," Rattner said. However, the PC industry balked at the cooling requirements that would have been needed to prevent 200-watt processors from melting systems, he said. And the 90-nanometer technology was more prone to electrical-current leakage than previous manufacturing technologies, making 90-nanometer chips hot even when they weren't running at full power.

As a result, Intel had to drop its focus on making faster and faster chips and instead embrace low-power designs and energy-efficient manufacturing techniques. It plans to switch to an entirely new chipmaking architecture later this year that minimizes power consumption.

"Now we're looking at power in the rest of the platform. The CPU is in relatively good shape," Rattner said.
__________
Read More / Source: News.com
Iria is offline   Reply With Quote


Reply

Thread Tools