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Q&A: Intel's Pat Gelsinger goes to the core

He talked up multicore chip technology after the launch of Woodcrest

July 6, 2006 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - Not long after arriving in New York on a red-eye flight, Pat Gelsinger, senior vice president and general manager of Intel Corp.'s Digital Enterprise Group, showed no signs of exhaustion after the launch of Intel's new Woodcrest chip. Gelsinger excitedly scribbled diagrams on a sketch pad illustrating advances in the dual-core Xeon processor, the first chip based on Intel's Core microarchitecture, and animatedly expounded on why he thinks the microarchitecture will help Intel win back market share lost to rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc. Gelsinger also touched on the upcoming launch of systems based on Intel's next-generation Itaninum "Montecito" chip and weighed in on some of the challenges ahead for multicore processing.

Excerpts from that interview follow:

What are you personally most proud of with the launch of Woodcrest? The Core microarchitecture that's at the heart of Woodcrest is not the performance king like the 486 was for its day; it's not the platform king like the Pentium Pro was in its day. This is the energy-efficient king. It really is this incredibly well-tuned machine of trade-offs of power and performance.

What could you have done better with Woodcrest? The FB-DIMMs' [fully buffered dual inline memory modules] power was over budget, and that was disappointing. So this tremendously good processor is making up for a bit of weakness in the power of the [FB-DIMMs'] subsystem. We'll get it fixed in subsequent revisions ... but that was disappointing this time around that we didn't do a bit better job there.

What makes you so certain that you'll gain back market share lost to AMD over the past couple of years? Since the beginning of the year, we have been aggressively seeding the platform with customers. We have 3,000 of these things out in the marketplace today, and the responses from [resellers, independent software vendors, software integrators] and end users has been nothing but spectacular. Fundamentally, I think there's pent-up demand, we expect to see a very rapid product ramp as a result.

You've said in the past that AMD's integrated memory controller is overhyped, yet you've also said you plan to add an integrated memory controller to your own future chips. Can you clarify that? We've never said the integrated memory controller is bad, but it is severely overhyped today. Our cache is twice as effective as theirs, so that means I go to memory half as often. So, independent of anything else, if I'm going to memory half as much, who cares how long it takes to get to memory? Plus, the other aspect of their design is they have this view of local memory and remote memory. So if you're running an operating system, half the time, you are local, and half the time, you are remote. Guess what, when you are remote, I have to go here and then go here. The time to get over there is actually equal to the time for us to get to our memory.


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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