According to Intel (Santa Clara, Calif.), the undertaking is a global effort to prepare university students for a "new paradigm" of software development as Intel transitions to processors incorporating multiple cores and threads. Intel expects more than 75 percent of its mainstream server, desktop and laptop PC processors to ship as dual core-processors by the end of this year. Four- and eight-core chips, are on the horizon, the company said.
Universities participating in the worldwide effort include Carnegie Mellon University, Cornell University, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Michigan and University of Washington, as well as leading academic institutions across Brazil, China, India, Mexico, Russia, Taiwan and several European countries, Intel said. The first courses will be offered during the fall term this year and Intel expects hundreds more universities to participate in 2007 and beyond.
"Intel's support in multi-core education is critical for two reasons," said Karsten Schwan, professor of College of Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology. "First, getting early access to advanced technology and new equipment is something that always excites students. Second, companies like Intel have a perspective that looks beyond research to see the broader potential for technology."
Intel's curriculum provides an introduction to the company's multi-core architecture and teaches computer science students how to achieve maximum performance of their programs on threaded, multi-core and multi-processor systems using Intel compilers and threading tools, the company said. It also covers the importance of parallelism, threading concepts, threading methodology and programming with threads, Intel said.
Included in the endeavor are faculty training sessions delivered by Intel Software College multi-threading experts from around the world, Intel said. The company also provides course materials, laptops powered by dual-core processors for instructor use in the classroom, as well as licenses for Intel Software Development Products and access to forums and technical support, Intel said.
More information about Intel's Software College and the Intel Higher Education Program is available on
the company's Web site.
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