As they had announced on Monday,
Intel and Microsoft made public on Tuesday the decision to sponsor the Parallel
Computing Lab opened in January 2008 at the University
of California, Berkeley,
but also research facilities at the University
of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. So, the world’s largest and most popular companies on their
markets, that is the chip market and the software market respectively, Intel
and Microsoft announced that they would once again join forces and spend no
less than $20 million over the following five years on academic research
related to parallel computing, which is a concept that can be simply explained
as the process of programming for microprocessors that have more than one core,
so that can carry out more than one set of program instructions at a time.
About two years
ago, researchers at Berkeley’s
Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences department warned that dual-core
or quad-core chips would not work for a future where processors could have as
many as 16 or 32, or even more, cores. Thus, they announced that they would try
to find a better way to develop programming models in order to meet the
challenges of multi-core microprocessors.
In this context,
it is obvious why Berkeley
researchers’ efforts are important both for Microsoft and Intel. The latter,
for example, is to release Dunnington, a six-core processor, in the second
half of 2008 and Nehalem, an eight-core processor, in late 2008.
The University
of California, Berkeley,
and the University
of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign hope to spend also about $15 million from their own budgets on
this project.
"Twenty-plus years ago, the
research space in parallel computing was looking toward the end of Moore's Law, and so there
were bases that were built there to exploit parallelization," said
Microsoft Research’s director of scalable and multi-core computing, Dan Reed.