If you’ve been hankering to get your hands on that stamp-sized 48-core processor Intel introduced last year, you’d better brush off your doctorate — the chipmaker says it will send samples of the CPU to researchers and academic institutions by the end of Q2. Clocked between 1.66GHz and 1.83GHz like Intel’s Atom netbook chips, the 48 cores won’t boost your framerates in Crysis — rather, they’re intended for linear algebra, fluid dynamics and server work — but what we wouldn’t give to try. Oh well — suppose we’ll just have to make do with puny 8- and 12-core chips for now.

Intel’s 48-core processor destined for science, ships to universities soon originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 10 Apr 2010 06:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceIDG News  | Email this | Comments
Go to Source

Related posts:

  1. Qualcomm ships first dual-core Snapdragon chipsets clocking 1.2GHz
  2. Intel bringing dual-core Atom D510 processors to netbooks as the N500?
  3. Intel officially adds Pine Trail Atom N470 processor, early performance results don’t impress
  4. Sony EX3 prototype 3D camcorder spotted, destined for retail channels?
  5. Intel’s Core i7-980X Extreme Edition ‘Gulftown’ review roundup

Leave a Reply

Special Offers
Blogroll

Categories
Pages
Tags