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That's my main problem with it too. 3-5 chips instead of 1-2 with ARM SoCs. Hopefully with Medfield this problem will be resolved. H2/2011 could get interesting.Reading the Anandtech article. Thats a high number of chips to get this working. Even more if the phone has an above 5mp camera.
More like MS kicked them out the door (for whatever reasons), and with the benefit of hindsight they figure that grapes are sour.And what about "we don't support WP7"?
WP7 it's built for arm processors, what kind of support is intel talking?
Reading the Anandtech article. Thats a high number of chips to get this working. Even more if the phone has an above 5mp camera.
More like MS kicked them out the door (for whatever reasons), and with the benefit of hindsight they figure that grapes are sour.
I guess MS refused to maintain 2 ISA branches just to focus better on what they have now.
Don't know about the optics but Nokia's N8 at least there's suppose to be a big size sensor in there.
Don't know about the optics but Nokia's N8 at least there's suppose to be a big size sensor in there.
That's my main problem with it too. 3-5 chips instead of 1-2 with ARM SoCs. Hopefully with Medfield this problem will be resolved. H2/2011 could get interesting.
Regarding SGX, I'm a little bit disappointed that Intel didn't choose SGX545 over SGX535. I really thought Intel bould be the SGX545 launch partner.
And finally someone used IMG's VXE core in a SoC (well, compared to ARM SoCs Intel's Z600 doesn't really qualify as a SoC).
May be he didn't want to offend his contacts @Intel?yes i know, but anand isn't a stupid, would have make joke of this statement if it was completely pr stunt
maybe has something to do with arm emulation over x86? looks fairly impossible btw...
I'm personally not disappointed at all. SGX545 might have a high feature-set but it also doesn't come for free either. I'd rather prefer Intel to invest for it's next generation of embedded SoCs that die area in performance or else in SGX543 MP. According to IMG under 65LP (@200MHz) 545 equals 12.5mm2 and 543 8mm2 per core. 543 might be limited to SM3.0+ but with a 2MP/16mm2@65LP you get more than twice the performance of a 545.
For the moment and always IMHO fill-rates have a sizable importance in the embedded space. Going to a 545@200MHz vs. 535@400MHz as an example means twice the fill-rate in the latter case, since all cores =/>535 have 2 TMUs. Frequency doesn't scale unfortunately in parallel with die area.
What do you mean with tiny chips? Apart from the extra DRAM chip, there's also Langwell, which is even bigger than Lincroft (14x14x1.3mm vs. 13.8x13.8x1.1mm).Apart from the DRAM I don't see how the extra chips matter, tiny chips with tiny bandwidth interfaces ... their integration wouldn't save much power or area AFAICS.
For tablets this isn't that big of a problem, but the main target here is smartphones.
I think 2-3 chips more matter if you want to build compact smartphones with mainboards like this (especially for next-gen devices that launch in Q4/2010):
Oh hai!Arun, if you're reading, do you have any preliminary thoughts on Z600 and the silicon required for designs, specifically with regards to integration and the area and number of chips (especially the mixed signal chip and what radio ICs you see being paired with the chipset) ?