Kilocore
Produced | 2006 |
---|---|
Designed by | Rapport, IBM |
Common manufacturer(s) | |
Max. CPU clock rate | 125 MHz |
Instruction set | PowerPC |
Cores | 256, 1024, 1025 |
Kilocore, from Rapport Inc. and IBM, is a high-performance, low-power multi-core microprocessor that has 1,025 cores. It contains a single PowerPC processing core, and 1,024 eight-bit Processing Elements running at 125 MHz each, which can be dynamically reconfigured, connected by a shared interconnect. It allows high performance parallel processing.
Rapport's first product to market is the KC256, with 256 8-bit processing elements. The KC256 started shipping in 2006.[1] The elements are grouped in 16 "stripes" of 16 processing elements each, with each stripe able to be dedicated to a particular task.
The "thousand core" products are the KC1024 and KC1025, due in 2008. Both have 1024 8-bit processing elements, in a 32 x 32-stripe configuration. The KC1025 has the PowerPC CPU, while the KC1024 has processing elements only.
IBM says that the Kilocore1025 will enable "streaming live- and high-definition video on a low-power, mobile device at 5 to 10 times the speed of existing processors." [2]
References
- ↑ "Rapport inc". Archived from the original on 20 Dec 2007.
- ↑ Tom's hardware: "IBM says Kilocore technology will outrun today's mobile processors" 2006