- Mar 27, 2009
- 12,968
- 221
- 106
http://www.tgdaily.com/content/view/41628/135/
I know this is a 2 month old article but looking at the intel roadmap yesterday got me thinking.
At the moment all CPUs past Sandy Bridge are going to be 8 core by default.....but for consumers to use all these extra cores the x86 software needs to be specifically coded "multi-threaded" right?
Is there someway Nvidia could bypass the need for specific "multi-threaded" software with their parallel multi-core technology? So instead of "single threaded" programs only using 1 core of a octo core CPU they could more efficiently be spread out over all the cores?
The reason I am asking is because at the moment I am not seeing myself needing so many CPU cores in the future. I would rather have fewer but faster cores (if anything) the way current CPU software is coded.
What happens to x86 technology once intel starts making 16 and 32 core CPUs.....but most common everyday programs are based on "single thread". Will some "other technology" from the GPU world that is able to spread out "single threaded" programs over many cores start to look at lot more attractive and less wasteful.
Moved from the Video forum.
AmberClad
Video Moderator
I know this is a 2 month old article but looking at the intel roadmap yesterday got me thinking.
At the moment all CPUs past Sandy Bridge are going to be 8 core by default.....but for consumers to use all these extra cores the x86 software needs to be specifically coded "multi-threaded" right?
Is there someway Nvidia could bypass the need for specific "multi-threaded" software with their parallel multi-core technology? So instead of "single threaded" programs only using 1 core of a octo core CPU they could more efficiently be spread out over all the cores?
The reason I am asking is because at the moment I am not seeing myself needing so many CPU cores in the future. I would rather have fewer but faster cores (if anything) the way current CPU software is coded.
What happens to x86 technology once intel starts making 16 and 32 core CPUs.....but most common everyday programs are based on "single thread". Will some "other technology" from the GPU world that is able to spread out "single threaded" programs over many cores start to look at lot more attractive and less wasteful.
Moved from the Video forum.
AmberClad
Video Moderator