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FROM SINGLE- TO MANY-CORE COMPUTING 14 April 2008 Dr Herbert Cornelius Intel EMEA Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Risk Factors This presentation contains forward-looking statements that involve a number of risks and uncertainties. These statements do not reflect the potential impact of any mergers, acquisitions, divestitures, investments or other similar transactions that may be completed in the future, with the exception of the Numonyx transaction. Our forward-looking statements for 2008 reflect the expectation that the Numonyx transaction will close during the first quarter. The information presented is accurate only as of today’s date and will not be updated. In addition to any factors discussed in the presentation, the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially include the following: Factors that could cause demand to be different from Intel's expectations include changes in business and economic conditions, including conditions in the credit market that could affect consumer confidence; customer acceptance of Intel’s and competitors’ products; changes in customer order patterns, including order cancellations; and changes in the level of inventory at customers. Intel’s results could be affected by the timing of closing of acquisitions and divestitures. Intel operates in intensely competitive industries that are characterized by a high percentage of costs that are fixed or difficult to reduce in the short term and product demand that is highly variable and difficult to forecast. Additionally, Intel is in the process of transitioning to its next generation of products on 45 nm process technology, and there could be execution issues associated with these changes, including product defects and errata along with lower than anticipated manufacturing yields. Revenue and the gross margin percentage are affected by the timing of new Intel product introductions and the demand for and market acceptance of Intel's products; actions taken by Intel's competitors, including product offerings and introductions, marketing programs and pricing pressures and Intel’s response to such actions; Intel’s ability to respond quickly to technological developments and to incorporate new features into its products; and the availability of sufficient components from suppliers to meet demand. The gross margin percentage could vary significantly from expectations based on changes in revenue levels; product mix and pricing; capacity utilization; variations in inventory valuation, including variations related to the timing of qualifying products for sale; excess or obsolete inventory; manufacturing yields; changes in unit costs; impairments of long-lived assets, including manufacturing, assembly/test and intangible assets; and the timing and execution of the manufacturing ramp and associated costs, including start-up costs. Expenses, particularly certain marketing and compensation expenses, vary depending on the level of demand for Intel's products, the level of revenue and profits, and impairments of long-lived assets. Intel is in the midst of a structure and efficiency program that is resulting in several actions that could have an impact on expected expense levels and gross margin. We expect to complete the divestiture of our NOR flash memory assets to Numonyx. A delay or failure of the transaction to close, or a change in the financial performance of the contributed businesses could have a negative impact on our financial statements. Intel’s equity proportion of the new company’s results will be reflected on its financial statements below operating income and with a one quarter lag. The tax rate expectation is based on current tax law and current expected income. The tax rate may be affected by the jurisdictions in which profits are determined to be earned and taxed; changes in the estimates of credits, benefits and deductions; the resolution of issues arising from tax audits with various tax authorities , including payment of interest and penalties; and the ability to realize deferred tax assets. Gains or losses from equity securities and interest and other could vary from expectations depending on fixed income and equity market volatility; gains or losses realized on the sale or exchange of securities; gains or losses from equity method investments; impairment charges related to marketable, non-marketable and other investments; interest rates; cash balances; and changes in fair value of derivative instruments. Intel’s results could be affected by the amount, type, and valuation of share-based awards granted as well as the amount of awards cancelled due to employee turnover and the timing of award exercises by employees. Intel's results could be impacted by adverse economic, social, political and physical/infrastructure conditions in the countries in which Intel, its customers or its suppliers operate, including security concerns, natural disasters, infrastructure disruptions, health concerns and fluctuations in currency exchange rates. Intel's results could be affected by adverse effects associated with product defects and errata (deviations from published specifications), and by litigation or regulatory matters involving intellectual property, stockholder, consumer, antitrust and other issues, such as the litigation and regulatory matters described in Intel's SEC reports. A detailed discussion of these and other risk factors that could affect Intel’s results is included in Intel’s SEC filings, including the report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 29, 2007. Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Computing … Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. *Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others. NEED FOR SPEED & DENSITY Tera-Scale Computing TERAOPS Performance TERABYTES Memory Bandwidth TERABITS I/O Throughput Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. NEED FOR SPEED & DENSITY Tera-Scale Computing TERAOPS Performance TERABYTES Memory Bandwidth TERABITS I/O Throughput Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Some Observations Regarding Benefits vs. Efforts The number of transistors on a chip doubles every 24 month Processor architectures changed from area limited to power limited ILP useful for ~4 parallel instructions Instruction pipeline useful if 30 stages Power consumption grows about cubically with frequency Processing capability grows faster than memory speed Single core performance is growing slower than it used to be SMT/HT can mitigate the situation for certain workloads CMP/Multi-Core seems to be a reasonable “compromise” Opportunity for performance to increase faster than Moore’s Law Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. 1 TFLOPS on a Chip 62W Experimental Research Test Chip 100M Transistors – 80 Tiles – 275mm2 Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Industry Trend to Multi/Many-Core Intel Tera-Scale Computing Research Program: www.intel.com/go/terascale Many-Core Multi-Core Dual-Core Hyper-Threading QUAD-CORE Multi Processor Energy Efficient Petascale with Multi-threaded Cores Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. All products, dates, and figures are preliminary and are subject to change without any notice. On-Time 2 Year Cycles Moore´s Law is (still) leading the Chip Industry Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Future options subject to change; Source: Intel Going Forward New Materials and Designs Intel Architecture Core Core Enhancements Multi to Many-Core Platform Enhancements Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Going Forward Tri-Gate, Nanotubes Intel Architecture Core MMX SSE AVX Dual Quad Octo PCIe, IMC, QPI, SOC Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Memory and CPU package architectures for addressing bandwidth challenges Package Technology to Address the Memory Bandwidth Challenge for Tera-scale Computing, Intel Technology Journal, Volume 11, Issue 3, 2007 Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Future Vision, does not represent real Intel product Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. The Magic of 45 nm PERFORMANCE (Spectrum of Intel Architecture) SYSTEM ON A CHIP Notebook, Desktop and Server Ultra-low Cost and Power Optimized Architecture Intel® Core™ 2 and Nehalem Architecture Visual Computing and HPC Optimized Architecture POWER Source: Intel Internal Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. All plans, products, dates, and figures are preliminary and are subject to change without any notice. Bringing IA Programmability and Parallelism to High Performance & Throughput Computing IA++ IA++ IA++ IA++ IA++ IA++ IA++ IA++ … Special Function & I/O … Cache Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. … … … … IA++ … IA++ IA++ IA++ Highly parallel, IA programmable architecture in development Ease of scaling for software ecosystem Array of enhanced IA cores New Cache Architecture New Vector Processing Unit Scalable to TFLOPS performance Future options subject to change without notice. Tick/Tock: Our Model for Sustained Microprocessor Leadership Intel® Core™ Sandy Bridge Penryn Nehalem Westmere NEW Microarchitecture Compaction/ Derivative NEW Microarchitecture Compaction/ Derivative NEW Microarchitecture 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 65nm 45nm 45nm 32nm Forecast e.g. Intel® QuickPath Architecture Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Future options subject to change without notice. 32nm Parallel Programming Considerations Finding or Introducing Parallelism Serial vs. Parallel Algorithm Partitioning – Data-Parallelism – Functional-Parallelism – Manager/Worker Approach Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Implementing Parallelism Correctness Speed-Up Scalability Overhead Communication/Synchronization Load-Imbalance Granularity Platform Related Intel’s Software Tools and Support Intel® Threading Tools Cluster Tools ISN & ISC ISS Performance | Compatibility | Support | Productivity | Cross-Platform www.intel.com/software Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. INTEL® ARCHITECTURE Continuous Innovation and sustained Leadership Moving ahead to Multi/Many-Core Processors 45nm Production since 2007 2nd Generation Quad-Core – 100 GFLOPS/Processor today Advanced Next Generation Nehalem Architecture in 2008 High Density Platforms Energy Efficient Leading (Parallel) Software Tools Performance Easy to Use Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Industry’s First 45nm High-K Quad Core 100 GFLOPS/PROCESSOR Dual Core Server Desktop *Codenames Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Mobile What about Amdahl’s Law S max p ( n) S = (max.) speed-up n = number of processors/cores/threads p = parallel portion of the application 1 1 p np p|n 18.00 16.00 14.00 12.00 10.00 8.00 6.00 4.00 2.00 0.00 1 2 4 8 % parallel Gene Amdahl, "Validity of the Single Processor Approach to Achieving Large-Scale Computing Capabilities", AFIPS Conference Proceedings, (30), pp. 483-485, 1967. Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. 1. 00 0. 90 0. 80 0. 70 0. 60 0. 50 0. 40 0. 30 0. 20 16 0. 10 0. 00 Max. Speedup Amdahl's Law for Parallelism 1 2 4 8 16 0.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 0.05 1.00 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.05 0.10 1.00 1.05 1.08 1.10 1.10 0.15 1.00 1.08 1.13 1.15 1.16 0.20 1.00 1.11 1.18 1.21 1.23 0.25 1.00 1.14 1.23 1.28 1.31 0.30 1.00 1.18 1.29 1.36 1.39 0.35 1.00 1.21 1.36 1.44 1.49 0.40 1.00 1.25 1.43 1.54 1.60 0.45 1.00 1.29 1.51 1.65 1.73 0.50 1.00 1.33 1.60 1.78 1.88 0.55 1.00 1.38 1.70 1.93 2.06 0.60 1.00 1.43 1.82 2.11 2.29 0.65 1.00 1.48 1.95 2.32 2.56 0.70 1.00 1.54 2.11 2.58 2.91 0.75 1.00 1.60 2.29 2.91 3.37 0.80 1.00 1.67 2.50 3.33 4.00 0.85 1.00 1.74 2.76 3.90 4.92 0.90 1.00 1.82 3.08 4.71 6.40 0.95 1.00 1.90 3.48 5.93 9.14 1.00 1.00 2.00 4.00 8.00 16.00