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posted by takyon on Wednesday June 03 2015, @12:38PM   Printer-friendly
from the whats-hot-and-whats-not dept.

Computex 2015 has seen the enthusiastic promotion of Internet of Things devices, including a "smart diaper" seen on the show floor and a "smart vase" monitoring air quality featured in Intel's keynote.

The 6th generation of Intel Core processors, the 14nm "Tock" Skylake, was shown off in a 10mm thick all-in-one design with 4K resolution, but no new details about the CPUs were given. Sales of another form factor, the 2-in-1, were said to have increased 75% year-on-year, and they are expected to be more affordable this year. Intel also plans to increase the performance of its Atom-based Compute Sticks and release a more powerful Core M version this year.

Intel's Broadwell Xeon server chips will be featuring Iris Pro graphics. For example, the Xeon E3-1200v4 includes Iris Pro P6300, resulting in a chip suitable for video transcription. More details are at The Platform. Two socketed 65W Broadwell desktop processors with Iris Pro 6200 graphics have been announced. Both chips have 128 MB of on-die eDRAM acting as L4 cache. Other Broadwell desktop and laptop chips have been announced, and should be available within the next two months (followed by the first Skylake mobile chips in September).

Intel wants to bring wireless power and connectivity to Skylake laptops and tablets. Some Skylake devices will use WiGig (802.11ad) for data transfer, WiDi for display transfer, and Rezence magnetic resonance wireless charging. The extent to which PC vendors will commit to these cable-cutting wireless standards across Skylake devices remains to be seen. Intel also formally announced the merger of the Power Matters Alliance (PMA) and the Alliance for Wireless Power (A4WP).

Intel has deprecated the current Mini DisplayPort connector for Thunderbolt and adopted USB Type-C as the Thunderbolt 3 connector. Intel intended for the Thunderbolt interface to be used over USB ports in the first place back in 2011, but was blocked by the USB consortium at the time. Now that USB Type-C supports "USB Alternate Mode" functionality, the time has come for Intel to ditch MiniDP, the connector for 100 million Thunderbolt devices (many, but peanuts compared to USB). It has doubled the maximum bandwidth of Thunderbolt 3 to 40 Gbps, four times that of USB 3.1. Power consumption is halved, and the connector can drive two external 4K displays simultaneously or a single 5K display, at 60 Hz.

AMD has announced a launch date for graphics cards employing high-bandwidth memory (HBM): June 16th at E3. The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 Ti GPU was unveiled and reviewed the day before Computex. AMD's Carrizo APUs for laptops have been launched, at least on paper. AMD is explicitly targeting the $400-700 laptop segment with 15 W Carrizo chips. AMD has demoed FreeSync-over-HDMI, although hardware support remains scarce.

Broadcom and Qualcomm have unveiled 802.11ac MU-MIMO "Wave 2" products with 4x4 antenna configurations. Eight-antenna access points are capable of reaching an aggregate capacity of 6.77 Gbps. Broadcom also announced a 1 Watt gigabit Ethernet chip supporting the Energy Efficient Ethernet standard 802.3az, targeting European Code of Conduct energy efficiency requirements.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Wednesday June 03 2015, @01:08PM

    by FatPhil (863) <reversethis-{if.fdsa} {ta} {tnelyos-cp}> on Wednesday June 03 2015, @01:08PM (#191566) Homepage
    "Intel's Broadwell Xeon server chips will be featuring Iris Pro graphics." eh? For almost the entirety of their existance, servers don't even have displays. So they shouldn't need any graphics. Great - more wasted silicony. However, the up side is that server farms are always too cold, so at least the extra silicony will help keep the rest of the die warm enough to work efficiently. Ooops, did I type "silicony"? Sorry I meant "irony".
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by dyingtolive on Wednesday June 03 2015, @01:33PM

    by dyingtolive (952) on Wednesday June 03 2015, @01:33PM (#191579)

    I haven't seen a lot of servers with absolutely no video out on them. Sun comes to mind, but that's about it. Gotta hook a crash cart up to something.

    Yes, I realize that's not exactly something that you need Iris level quality for video on. Xeons are used in high end workstations as well, so perhaps that's the crowd they're catering to on this decision, and it was easier to make it standard than fab still more versions of CPU?

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    • (Score: 2, Informative) by GDX on Wednesday June 03 2015, @02:08PM

      by GDX (1950) on Wednesday June 03 2015, @02:08PM (#191597)

      Actually If you count OpenCL, the IrisPro can be sen as an accelerator for some workloads an then it makes more sense its integration in the Xeon Line.

    • (Score: 3, Interesting) by FatPhil on Wednesday June 03 2015, @02:46PM

      by FatPhil (863) <reversethis-{if.fdsa} {ta} {tnelyos-cp}> on Wednesday June 03 2015, @02:46PM (#191612) Homepage
      I have known of ethernet-port-only OS installation (net booting a minimal installer that simply unpacks a pre-configured image), but having some kind of video out is of course useful if there might be non-blue-sky moments. But you should only be doing that 0 or 1 time in the lifetime of the server. A serial console is all the output (and input) you should need.

      Of course, you can use these processors in high end graphics workstations - the old DEC, HP and SG boxen or yore spring to mind - why would one want to use the word "server" for that context. Maybe they forgot that they can use the word "enterprise" nearly anywhere to mean "expensive, but your company's worth it"?
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  • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Wednesday June 03 2015, @02:45PM

    by TheRaven (270) on Wednesday June 03 2015, @02:45PM (#191611) Journal
    Right. And there are absolutely no server workloads that benefit from OpenCL / Vulkan acceleration.
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  • (Score: 2) by deimios on Wednesday June 03 2015, @03:20PM

    by deimios (201) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday June 03 2015, @03:20PM (#191622) Journal

    IrisPro graphics have QuickSync which is a hardware media Encoder/Decoder. Think h265/HEVC.
    Also as others have stated they can accelerate certain workloads with OpenCL.

    Owerall good stuff that 99% of people will NOT be using in their servers until OpenCL use becomes as simple as editing a config file in /etc to accelerate your web/mail or whatever it can be used for.