HPCwire Job Bank
HPCwire

Since 1986 - Covering the Fastest Computers
in the World and the People Who Run Them

Language Flags

Visit additional Tabor Communication Publications

Datanami
Digital Manufacturing Report
HPC in the Cloud

Intel Itanium 9300 Processor Raises Bar for Mission-Critical Computing


  • Eighty percent of the Global 100 corporations have chosen Itanium-based servers for their most mission-critical applications.
  • More than double the performance of the previous Itanium processor.
  • More room for growth with up to an 800 percent increase in system interconnect bandwidth, up to a 500 percent gain in memory bandwidth and up to 700 percent more memory capacity.
  • Even better support for mission-critical environments with reliability, availability and serviceability enhancements throughout the processor and platform.
  • Common platform ingredients with Intel Xeon processors foster innovation, design synergy, manufacturing efficiency and flexibility for customers.

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 8 -- Intel Corporation today introduced the Itanium processor 9300 series, previously codenamed "Tukwila," which delivers more than double the performance of its predecessor, boosts scalability and adds reliability features to the Itanium platform that is already running mission-critical applications for 80 percent of the Global 100 corporations.

With the Gartner Group predicting a 650 percent growth in IT data over the next five years, businesses need increasingly powerful and scalable enterprise servers. The two-billion transistor Itanium processor 9300 series meets this need head on with twice as many cores as its predecessor (four versus two), eight threads per processor (through enhanced Intel Hyper-Threading Technology), more cache, up to 800 percent the interconnect bandwidth, up to 500 percent the memory bandwidth, and up to 700 percent the memory capacity using-industry standard DDR3 components.

Critical corporate workloads also demand high-availability features across all platform components. The Itanium processor 9300 series adds to the architecture's world-class resiliency with new reliability, availability, and serviceability (RAS) features that extend across the processor, its Intel QuickPath Interconnect technology, and the memory subsystem.

The processor's advanced machine-check architecture coordinates error handling across the hardware, firmware and operating system, and improves system availability by enabling recovery from otherwise fatal errors.

The Itanium 9300 processor employs the second generation of Intel Virtualization Technology to improve performance and robustness. Its Intel 7500 chipset can directly assign I/O devices to virtual machines, further boosting efficiency.

Built for the future of mission-critical computing

"Intel is committed to delivering a new era of mission-critical computing, and we are delighted 80 percent of Global 100 companies have chosen Itanium-based servers for their most demanding workloads," said Kirk Skaugen, vice president Intel Architecture Group and general manager Data Center Group. "Intel is continuing to drive the economics of Moore's Law into mission-critical computing with today's Itanium 9300 processor announcement, more than doubling performance for our customers once again."

"Customers need a flexible technology infrastructure that can efficiently and quickly meet changing mission-critical demands," said Martin Fink, senior vice president and general manager, Business Critical Systems, HP. "Intel's Itanium processor 9300 series, combined with HP Integrity servers, helps customers achieve new levels of scalability and resiliency with advanced virtualization capabilities to meet those needs."

CNAF, the French Family Allowance Service with 30 million beneficiaries, has chosen to adopt Bull's latest NovaScale GCOS Itanium-based servers. Gérard Russeil, CNAF chief information officer, said, "The Bull Itanium-based systems have consistently provided the reliability and availability that our mission-critical workload demands. Our testing shows that the Itanium 9300 processor's additional throughput and performance will enable us to consolidate multiple datacenters into one."

Mission-critical computing for the next decade

OEM systems based on the Intel Itanium processor 9300 series will be binary-compatible with existing software and can provide major performance improvements without the need for additional software optimization.

"Poulson," codename for the next Itanium processor, will add an advanced multicore architecture, instruction-level and hyper-threading enhancements, new reliability features and more.

Future Intel Itanium processors in development today are being designed for socket and binary compatibility with Intel Itanium 9300 processor-based systems and software. They are designed to scale in performance and capacity through component upgrades, without software recompilation, so customers can continue to expand and adapt their mission-critical computing systems.

Common platform ingredients with Intel Xeon processors spur innovation, add value

The Itanium 9300 processor series and the future Intel Xeon processor, codenamed "Nehalem EX," share several platform ingredients, including the Intel QuickPath Interconnect, the Intel Scalable Memory Interconnect, the Intel 7500 Scalable Memory Buffer (to take advantage of industry standard DDR3 memory), and I/O hub (Intel 7500 chipset). The common elements foster shared innovation, design synergy, and manufacturing efficiency across Intel Xeon and Itanium processor families, and flexibility for customers.

Intelligent Energy Efficiency

An enhanced form of Demand-Based Switching (DBS) lowers power consumption when utilization is low. Intel Turbo Boost Technology automatically senses and adapts to provide the right performance boost when needed, and to conserve power when it is not. The Intel Itanium processor 9300 series ranges in price from $946 to $3,838 in quantities of 1,000. OEM systems are expected to ship within 90 days.

About Intel

Intel (NASDAQ: INTC), the world leader in silicon innovation, develops technologies, products and initiatives to continually advance how people work and live. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom and blogs.intel.com.

-----

Source: Intel Corp.

HPCwire on Twitter

Discussion

There are 0 discussion items posted.

Join the Discussion

Join the Discussion

Become a Registered User Today!


Registered Users Log in join the Discussion

May 23, 2012

May 22, 2012

May 21, 2012

May 18, 2012

May 17, 2012

May 16, 2012

May 15, 2012

May 14, 2012

May 11, 2012

May 10, 2012


Most Read Features

Most Read Around the Web

Most Read This Just In

Appro Nvidia Tesla Next Generation Xtreme-X Supercomputer

Feature Articles

NVIDIA Works On CPU Co-Dependency Issues with Kepler GPU

NVIDIA is telling everyone that the GK110, its new Kepler GPU aimed at supercomputing, is all about improving performance per watt. But the other driving theme behind the new architecture is reducing the GPU's reliance on its CPU host. How well it accomplishes both these goals areas could determine the success of the new chip in high performance computing.
Read more...

OpenACC Starts to Gather Developer Mindshare

PGI, Cray, and CAPS enterprise are moving quickly to get their new OpenACC-supported compilers into the hands of GPGPU developers. At NVIDIA's GPU Technology Conference this week, there was plenty of discussion around the new HPC accelerator framework, and all three OpenACC compiler makers, as well as NVIDIA, were talking up the technology.
Read more...

NVIDIA Launches Kepler Into HPC

NVIDIA has introduced its first Kepler-generation GPU product for high performance computing, and revealed some of the inner working of the new architecture. The announcement took place at the kickoff of the company's GPU Technology Conference taking place this week in San Jose, California.
Read more...

Around the Web

Can Google’s Page Ranking Algorithm Cure Cancer?

May 23, 2012 | Computational biologists tweak PageRank to correlate protein markers with disease progression.
Read more...

Apple Datacenter Blooms Green Energy

May 22, 2012 | Company looks to renewable energy to power its computing infrastructure.
Read more...

NVIDIA’s Bill Dally Talks 3D Chips and More at GTC

May 16, 2012 | Chief scientist discusses memory stacks, interconnects, and US technology leadership.
Read more...

NVIDIA Unveils Virtualized GPU with Kepler-Based Board

May 15, 2012 | GPU maker conjures up visualization technology for virtual desktops.
Read more...

Zettaflops Will Happen Says HPC Analyst

May 14, 2012 | Pessimistic predictions about technology have a poor track record, according to 451's John Barr.
Read more...

Sponsored Whitepapers

Sponsored Multimedia

ISC Think Tank 2012

Newsletters

Exxact

HPC Job Bank


Featured Events







HPC Wire Events