ITworld.com
  Search  
ITworld Home Page ITworld Webcasts ITworld White Papers ITworld Newsletters ITworld News ITworld Topics Careers ITworld Voices ITwhirled Changing the way you view IT

Nvidia graphics chips perform double duty as CPUs

IDG News Service 05/23/2007

Robert Mullins, IDG News Service, San Francisco Bureau

Nvidia Corp. is promoting the idea that the graphics processing units (GPUs) it makes can also operate, when needed, as additional CPUs (central processing units) to vastly increase computing power.

On this topic

"It's (the GPU) just sitting there and a lot of people got this great idea, 'Gee, let's do some computing with this,'" said John Nickolls, director of architecture for Nvidia, in a presentation Wednesday at the Microprocessor Forum 2007 in San Jose, California.

When it's not performing graphics-related tasks, the GPU can be used in parallel with the central processing unit (CPU), Nickolls said, delivering up to 200 billion FLOPS (floating-point operations per second), a measure of computer performance.

Nvidia released a beta version of software called CUDA (for compute unified device architecture) in February. A general release is expected in the second half of this year. CUDA allows software developers to write programs that instruct the GPU to perform some computing functions normally done only by the CPU. Using the GPU as a CPU is not new, said Nickolls, but CUDA should make it easier for software developers to do.

CUDA only works on Nvidia's GeForce 8800 and 8600 and the Quadro FX 4600 and 5600 GPUs introduced in November 2006.

The GeForce GPU, for example, can act as a co-processor to the CPU, has its own 16K-bit memory and runs more than 128,000 instruction threads in parallel, he said. Groups of threads can also work together to accomplish one task.

"People buy GPUs to do graphics but it's just sitting there in your PC most of the time," said Nickolls. "It's a wonderful high-performance massively parallel computer so we're trying to open that up a bit."

Applications that could run on a GPU used as a CPU include those used in the fields of science, medicine, finance or other work that depends on high processing power.

Nvidia's approach differs from the one touted by Advanced Micro Devices Inc. Tuesday at Microprocessor Forum. AMD, which acquired the graphics chip company ATI Technologies Inc. in 2006, is in the early stages of development of a combined CPU/GPU called Fusion, which is due some time in 2009. Fusion is offered more as a cost play, Nickolls said, in order to reduce cost by combining the GPU and CPU, rather than to boost performance.

The two-day Microprocessor Forum was hosted by the research firm In-Stat.

Robert Mullins is U.S. correspondent for the IDG News Service.




Sponsored Links

IP Networks Boost Secure Health Communications
AT&T provides secure communication to keep health care moving forward.
Great Deals On FUJITSU Notebooks @ Synnex!
SYNNEX RESELLERS - Check Out The Savings On Lifebook Notebooks, Tablet PCs, And Ultra-Mobile PCs!
TOSHIBA SATELLITE PRO Notebook – Save With Synnex!
SYNNEX RESELLERS - Great Deals On Toshiba. Business Computing Has Never Been More Affordable!
RESOLVE SUPPORT ISSUES from your Desktop!
Minimize downtime with a remote support solution that lets you resolve issues right from the desktop
Check Out This Promotional Deal-SONY VAIO SZ645PA!
SYNNEX RESELLERS – This Is One Of The Top Notebooks On The Market Today. Hurry Up, Buy Now & Save!
» Buy a link now

Advertisements
Sponsored links
Bring harmony to your mix of UNIX-Linux-Windows computing environments
Top 5 Reasons to Combine App Performance and Security
KODAK i1400 Series Scanners stand up to the challenge
Locate Hidden Software on business PCs with this free tool
 Home   IT in the enterprise  Reports and announcements
www.itworld.com    open.itworld.com     security.itworld.com     smallbusiness.itworld.com
storage.itworld.com     utilitycomputing.itworld.com     wireless.itworld.com

 
Contact Us   About Us   Privacy Policy    Terms of Service   Reprints  

CIO   Computerworld   CSO   GamePro   Games.net   Industry Standard   Infoworld   ITworld  
JavaWorld   LinuxWorld  MacUser   Macworld   Network World   PC World   Playlist  

DEMO   IDG Connect   IDG Knowledge Hub   IDG TechNetwork   IDG World Expo  

Copyright © Computerworld, Inc. All rights reserved

Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Computerworld Inc. is prohibited. Computerworld and Computerworld.com and the respective logos are trademarks of International Data Group Inc.