Tuesday, April 2nd 2019

Intel Driving Data-Centric World with New 10nm Intel Agilex FPGA Family

Intel announced today a brand-new product family, the Intel Agilex FPGA. This new family of field programmable gate arrays (FPGA) will provide customized solutions to address the unique data-centric business challenges across embedded, network and data center markets. "The race to solve data-centric problems requires agile and flexible solutions that can move, store and process data efficiently. Intel Agilex FPGAs deliver customized connectivity and acceleration while delivering much needed improvements in performance and power for diverse workloads," said Dan McNamara, Intel senior vice president, Programmable Solutions Group.

Customers need solutions that can aggregate and process increasing amounts of data traffic to enable transformative applications in emerging, data-driven industries like edge computing, networking and cloud. Whether it's through edge analytics for low-latency processing, virtualized network functions to improve performance, or data center acceleration for greater efficiency, Intel Agilex FPGAs are built to deliver customized solutions for applications from the edge to the cloud. Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) analytics at the edge, network and the cloud are compelling hardware systems to cope with evolving standards, support varying AI workloads, and integrate multiple functions. Intel Agilex FPGAs provide the flexibility and agility required to meet these challenges and deliver gains in performance and power.
The Intel Agilex family combines FPGA fabric built on Intel's 10nm process with innovative heterogeneous 3D SiP technology. This provides the capability to integrate analog, memory, custom computing, custom I/O, and Intel eASIC device tiles into a single package with the FPGA fabric. Intel delivers a custom logic continuum with reusable IPs through a migration path from FPGA to structured ASIC. One API provides a software-friendly heterogeneous programming environment, enabling software developers to easily access the benefits of FPGA for acceleration.

The Intel Agilex FPGA provides new capabilities to help accelerate the solutions of tomorrow. These innovations include:
  • Compute Express Link: Industry's first FPGA to support Compute Express Link, a cache and memory coherent interconnect to future Intel Xeon Scalable processors.
  • 2nd-Generation HyperFlex Architecture: Up to 40 percent higher performance, or up to 40 percent lower total power compared with Intel Stratix 10 FPGAs.
  • DSP Innovation: Only FPGA supporting hardened BFLOAT16 and up to 40 teraflops of digital signal processor (DSP) performance (FP16).
  • Peripheral component interconnect express (PCIe) Gen 5: Higher bandwidth compared with PCIe Gen 4.
  • Transceiver Data Rates: Support up to 112 Gbps data rates.
  • Advanced memory support: DDR5, HBM, Intel Optane DC persistent memory support.
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5 Comments on Intel Driving Data-Centric World with New 10nm Intel Agilex FPGA Family

#1
juiseman
On 10nm process? wait...so they can do FPGA's on 10nm but not desktop/server parts?...hmmmm...
I guess we know where their resources have been the last 10 years... lol....
Like any good business; they go where the money is at. big GOV contracts, server markets, custom chips...ect...
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#2
OSdevr
juisemanOn 10nm process? wait...so they can do FPGA's on 10nm but not desktop/server parts?...hmmmm...
I guess we know where their resources have been the last 10 years... lol....
Like any good business; they go where the money is at. big GOV contracts, server markets, custom chips...ect...
FPGAs are incredibly fine grained. If you get one defect on a CPU core that core is unusable. With an FPGA a single defect has virtually no effect on resources. Theoretically you could have THOUSANDS of defects on an FPGA and still be able to sell it as a lower capacity model. Flash memory is often manufactured on bleeding edge nodes for the same reason, but FPGAs are even more resistant.

In theory even a 1% yield on FPGAs is tolerable, especially considering the prices these things fetch.
Posted on Reply
#3
juiseman
I did not know that.
Good info...I need to read up more on them
Posted on Reply
#4
OSdevr
juisemanI did not know that.
Good info...I need to read up more on them
They're really neat devices, I have a development board for a relatively small one. The top of the line ones however can fetch as much as a sports car.
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