Thursday, September 1st 2022

Intel Unveils First Socketed SoC Processors for Edge Innovation

Intel has announced the availability of its 12th Gen Intel Core SoC processors for IoT Edge. Representing a new lineup of purpose-built edge products optimized for Internet of Things (IoT) applications, this first-of-its-kind socketed system-on-chip (SoC) delivers high performance integrated graphics and media processing for visual compute workloads, a compact footprint to enable smaller innovative form factor designs, and a wide operating thermal design power (TDP) that enables fanless designs and helps customers achieve product sustainability goals.

"As the digitization of business processes continues to accelerate—fueled by workforce demand, supply chain constraints and changing consumer behavior—the amount of data created at the edge and the need for it to be processed and analyzed locally continues to explode. Intel understands the challenges that businesses face—across a wide range of vertical industries—and is committed to help them continue to deliver innovative use cases," said Jeni Panhorst, Intel vice president and general manager of the Network and Edge Compute Division.
Digital transformation at the edge requires increased processing power and AI inference performance to future-proof AI workloads. 12th Gen Intel Core SoC processors for IoT Edge respond to these performance demands and expand implementation configurability and overall solution flexibility to enable original equipment manufacturers and original design manufacturers to quickly integrate - and ship - solutions that fit the wide variety of unique vertical market and edge-specific use cases. Additionally, the SoC processors feature manageability capabilities from top to bottom, including Intel vPro options for best-in-class remote control and manageability essential for managing and servicing systems deployed at the IoT edge.

About 12th Gen Intel Core SoC processors for IoT Edge
Delivering up to 4 times faster graphics and up to 6.6 times faster GPU image classification inference performance compared with 10th Gen Intel Core desktop processors in a 12 W to 65 W design, 12th Gen Intel Core SoC processors for IOT Edge include Intel Thread Director, which intelligently directs the operating system to assign the right workload to the right core. With up to 14 cores and 20 threads, the SoC processors reach up to 1.32 times faster single-thread performance and up to 1.27 times faster multi-threaded performance compared with 10th Gen Intel Core desktop processors.

12th Gen Intel Core SoC processors for IoT Edge support high-performing AI for inferencing and machine vision. Up to 96 graphics execution units allow for a high degree of parallelization in AI workloads, while built-in AI acceleration on the CPU from Intel Deep Learning Boost (Intel DL Boost) provides additional inferencing performance. These processors fully support Intel Distribution of OpenVINO toolkit optimizations and cross-architecture inferencing.

"By combining the CPU with the highest performing integrated graphics, enhanced visual compute, and AI into one compact processing configuration, 12th Gen Intel Core SoC processors for IoT Edge make it easier for customers to unlock new opportunities from customized retail point-of-sale solutions to precise imaging and pattern recognition for improved healthcare diagnoses," Panhorst said.

12th Generation Intel Core processors for IoT Edge deliver benefits across industries
  • Retail, banking, hospitality, and education customers will be able to expand remote control and manageability capabilities of systems at the edge, drive value from frictionless point-of-sale and quickly respond to changing supply and demand.
  • Industrial manufacturing customers can take better advantage of industrial PCs, edge servers, advanced controllers, machine vision systems and virtualized control platforms.
  • Healthcare customers will be able to deliver enhanced ultrasound imaging, medical carts, endoscopy and clinical devices at the edge.
Add your own comment

10 Comments on Intel Unveils First Socketed SoC Processors for Edge Innovation

#1
Nanochip
So what’s the difference between these “edge” processors and say a 12700?
Posted on Reply
#2
tpu7887
What has "AI" enabled society to do? With all these products being made, claiming to be capable of "Deep" learning using "artificial intelligence", what is actually being done by them? It's been a few years now, the list should be long! But it's not. What about what's being done with them then? They've been selling by the millions...

I say nothing. Nothing! Nothing that couldn't be done before, is being done now. It's just transistors, a bit smaller than before, running code.
And it's usually bloated garbage.

I'm wrong? You say I'm wrong?

Then tell me, what's being done now, that wasn't before? No generalizations, and no misappropriation.
Since the answer is "nothing" and you still want to argue with me for some reason, you tell me "nothing new, but it's better now".
What
is better? Exactly how is it better?

Details. I want details. I don't need many - all I've seen is promises from virtual paper pushers.

5 years ago computer tech got boring, hardware stagnant. Marketing departments said "call it AI, that'll get them off your back". Nothing will seem different right away because nothing is using it yet. And after some time (when things should have come from it but nothing has come of it), we can blame... lack of development!!!!!

CPUs barely improved from 2011-2021. Now Alder-Lake IS what Sandy Bridge WAS in 2011 - in another decade you'll see.

Personally I'm buying Intel's 13th gen, the equivalent of Ivy Bridge (you know, the one in 2012 that brought us PCIe 3.0 and USB 3.0, both of which weren't improved upon for a DECADE). This time it'll just be USB4 Rev. 2.0. Need that 80Gbps external inteface to last til 2033!!!
See how ridiculous it looks when you add 11 years? That's how ridiculous it's been for the past 11 years.
Mark my words, it'll happen
Posted on Reply
#3
Minus Infinity
Please explain what the hell "edge computing" even means. I hear this all the time and am too lazy to google it.
Posted on Reply
#4
tpu7887
Minus InfinityPlease explain what the hell "edge computing" even means. I hear this all the time and am too lazy to google it.
It means using cloud apps through Microsoft's Google browser called Edge. That's about all these chips will be capable of anyway.

I'm joking. Like "AI" it means nothing new. Just a different name for the same crap (it's this iteration of BGA chips which are the same as socketed, but without sockets)
Remember 5-8 years ago when they said the socket was going away? lol. For different CPUs you'd have to pick your motherboard, then see if it came from the factory with the processor you wanted, already attached?
Stupid, yeah
Posted on Reply
#5
big_glasses
Minus InfinityPlease explain what the hell "edge computing" even means. I hear this all the time and am too lazy to google it.
It's supposed to mean servers placed at the "edge" of the network, and not in a (big) datacenter.
Edge often being closer to customers. Ether in form of a backbone small scale datacenter, or a local datacenter.
In "the industry"(or atleast mine) it also have the connotation of being small/smaller scale.

Most known examples of 'edge servers' is internet cache servers, like Akamai-solutions or youtube & netflix servers located at some ISP service, for shorter round time and less network load
about.netflix.com/en/news/how-netflix-works-with-isps-around-the-globe-to-deliver-a-great-viewing-experience
Posted on Reply
#6
Wirko
tpu7887What has "AI" enabled society to do? With all these products being made, claiming to be capable of "Deep" learning using "artificial intelligence", what is actually being done by them? It's been a few years now, the list should be long! But it's not. What about what's being done with them then? They've been selling by the millions...

I say nothing. Nothing! Nothing that couldn't be done before, is being done now. It's just transistors, a bit smaller than before, running code.
And it's usually bloated garbage.

I'm wrong? You say I'm wrong?

Then tell me, what's being done now, that wasn't before? No generalizations, and no misappropriation.
Since the answer is "nothing" and you still want to argue with me for some reason, you tell me "nothing new, but it's better now".
What
is better? Exactly how is it better?

Details. I want details. I don't need many - all I've seen is promises from virtual paper pushers.

5 years ago computer tech got boring, hardware stagnant. Marketing departments said "call it AI, that'll get them off your back". Nothing will seem different right away because nothing is using it yet. And after some time (when things should have come from it but nothing has come of it), we can blame... lack of development!!!!!
Hey, it's just low precision fused-multiply-add on vectors and matrices, and similar stuff, nothing fancy.
Posted on Reply
#7
enzolt
Some people here need to understand what theyre commenting on before leaving a belligerent and ignorant reaction...
Posted on Reply
#8
tpu7887
enzoltSome people here need to understand what theyre commenting on before leaving a belligerent and ignorant reaction...
I understand enough to leave the comment I did. 10 years of stagnation
WirkoHey, it's just low precision fused-multiply-add on vectors and matrices, and similar stuff, nothing fancy.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FMA_instruction_set#CPUs_with_FMA3

Bulllllldozer 2012
Posted on Reply
#10
TheoneandonlyMrK
Damn transistors!.

Anyway noice , shame I'm not in the right test circle's
Posted on Reply
Dec 21st, 2024 05:44 EST change timezone

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