Although only few commercial products have emerged as yet from the accelerated computing initiative announced by AMD in June 2006, the company believes it has moved the effort past the first phase of a three-stage strategy to make specialized processing engines more commercially viable, according to Doug O'Flaherty, division manager for acceleration strategies at AMD.
The first phase of AMD's effort has been a bit of a "chicken and egg" effort as the company has attempted to promote its approach and worked with industry bodies to define standards that will enable tighter integration of processors such as AMD's Opteron with co-processors, graphics processor and other logic arrays that can improve overall performance and efficiency.
Announced "acceleration" products include Activ Financial System's use of the open-socket Torrenza platform that combines AMD's Opteron processor with a field programmable gate array that provides hardware acceleration specifically for running critical financial software applications. Hewlett-Packard has said some "select" upcoming quad-core Opteron-based servers will provide support that will enable end-users to deploy customized acceleration solutions.
AMD believes it is entering the second phase of its accelerated computing effort and that there will be much broader support and commercialization of customized and optimized processor chip-sets over the next 12 to 18 months. In the third phase, rapid adoption would make the third-party enabled platforms significant contributors to AMD's bottom line.
Nathan Brookwood, an analyst with Insight 64, said he has remained "pretty consistently skeptical" about AMD's ability to make specialized accelerated processing platforms into significant mass market products, but believes the approach is a reasonable strategy for markets where the specialized improvements are critical to success, such as high-performance computing, academia and security.
"The effort has began to find some homes in niches where the people inside are really smart and have the time to invest effort in special purpose hardware," Brookwood said. "The kinds of things you can do with these extensions are very specialized and deal with signal processing or making specific algorithms go faster, but for most people it's not going to merit the effort and will fall to the bottom of the list of things they could potentially do."
But AMD believes as demands for peak performance at higher efficiencies will necessitate the move to accelerated computing platforms, and that its early efforts to work with equipment designers and innovative chip developers will pay off in the years ahead.
"We believe that freedom of choice is important, and that's what accelerated computing is all about," O'Flaherty said. "We are offering choice is how you can go about solving technical problems. We've got the early adopters and we are continuing to work to identify markets that have very specific and real needs that can be more adequately addressed by this approach."
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