Home > Intel Communities > Open Port IT Community > Intel Premier IT Professional Zone > Blog > Tags > performance

IPIP Community Blog

4 Posts tagged with the performance tag
0

Let's face it–the Intel® Xeon® processor is the world's most widely deployed server for a good reason. IT has grown to rely on Intel Xeon processors for their performance, reliability, virtualization capabilities, and a whole lot more.

And at this week's Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in San Francisco, Intel Senior Fellow Stephen Pawlowski took the stage to discuss the next generation of Intel Xeon processors, codenamed Nehalem-EX. "We've had a number of customers who have come to us and said, 'we want to be able to use Xeon and also the mission critical segment.  What kinds of things or what kinds of capabilities can you put in there?'" spoke Pawlowski in his IDF session. The answer? Intel is throwing a whole lot at Nehalem-EX, all but the kitchen sink.

Designed for mission-critical performance, RAS, along with hardware-based virtualization, Nehalem-EX has got an industry-standard server makeover, with the ability to monitor, report, and recover from hardware errors to maintain data integrity and keep mission-critical services online. And that's just the half of it. With Nehalem-EX, IT and business knows that they've got a solid roadmap they can rely on for years to come.

Nehalem-EX also offers scalability along with world-record virtualization performance, enabling the highest consolidation ratios of any industry-standard server. And as IT departments across the board move to lower costs while increasing hardware utilization, Intel has responded to their needs by improving and enhancing its hardware-based virtualization technology.

Including broad industry support for an era that is increasingly moving towards the cloud, virtualization technology combined with energy-efficient performance and RAS-rich environments provide a reliable, scalable environment that IT departments can bank on. 

Get more on Stephen Pawlowski's IDF session by visiting http://tinyurl.com/ycacf2c

0 Comments Permalink
0

Thanks to everyone who shared their IT best practices through the Intel Premier IT Knowledge Award program.  Judges from Intel and CXO Media poured over the very qualified submissions and had the hard job of narrowing to a handful of finalists.  Two awards (one for management of client fleet, one for data center) will be chosen by a panel of judges from Intel and CXO Media.  One additional award winner will be chosen by the IT community members of Intel Premier IT Professional via online voting.

So it's your turn. 

Users can find the link to vote on http://ipip.intel.com

For those who are not program members, membership is free and takes just a few minutes. You'll also stay up-to-date with best practices and technology insights online, in publications and local events.

The Intel Premier IT Knowledge Awards program was designed to recognize and reward North American IT managers/groups who have generated best practices, driving business value and innovation.   

The finalists represent diversity of business size, type, and solutions deployed using Intel architecture.

 

Data Center Management

Applied Materials

HD Supply

RichRelevance

Toyota Motor Sales, Inc.

Client Fleet Management

Hay Group

Our Kids of Miami-Dade/Monroe, Inc. 

Polycom, Inc.

Raleigh Pediatrics Associates

 

Award winners will receive industry recognition in an upcoming issue of CIO magazine as well as invited guest at either the CIO 100 Symposium and Awards or the CIO: The Year Ahead event. 

 

Let us know who your favorite IT hero is. 

0 Comments Permalink
4

As I sit back and think of some of the newer technologies we have looked at recently, I find myself wondering if IT is in the never ending cycle of re-inventing the wheel. What I mean by this is sometimes it seems as if we continue to try and re-engineer everything to make it fit our environment or how we think it should work. When viewing newer technologies, usage models and trying to pass data off to other groups the phrases I think I hear the most are, “That will never work in our environment,” or “If we can get them to change this, this and this, we may be able to use it here” or my favorite, “This will never be secure enough for us to use it as it exists”. While these may be valid assessments against the way we do things today, the big question is: should we be pushing ourselves to look for new ways of doing things? Five years ago, employees preferred to use their machines and software loads supplied by IT because they were more powerful or feature rich than anything they had at home. But in today’s society, people have higher end machines at home than IT supplies them. They also use newer technologies that are usually off limits or not supported by IT. Think of some of the tools we use today, such as this blog or even instant messaging. These technologies exist in our corporate environment because we saw people using them at home and brought them into our corporate environment. It wasn’t something that IT created and people took home to use. So with so many of these newer technologies out there, should we keep pushing to make them adapt to our IT world, or should we start pushing IT to start adapting to new models. We take umbrella approaches to everything today. Total security of the platform, instead of trying to reduce the footprint we have to manage. We look for solutions that will cover the majority of the users, versus what may be right for smaller enclaves. We place several management clients on the platform to perform numerous tasks instead of using native components or reducing some of the redundant requirements we have. Moving forward, the next generation of workers will expect businesses to offer familiar technology and won’t accept tradition as an excuse. IT shops need to provide workers with “cool” ways to work. If they don’t, they risk becoming obsolete.

4 Comments Permalink
0

Welcome to the new Intel Premier IT Professional zone! I hope that everyone who has visited the old IPIP site for content on technology and IT best practices will take advantage of the new Open Port site to engage us in a more interactive discussion on how we can make you more successful.

 

For my first few blogs I’m going to stick close to the script I normally use when speaking at IPIP events – HOWEVER, you’ll have to attend an event in person to take advantage of the live demos and the lively Q&A sessions, not to mention the animated frog video and the free Starbucks cards (admit it, you really want to get an IPIP event now, don’t you )

 

The theme of this blog is “Technology is providing tremendous benefits to IT”. I’m going to describe a number of key technology innovations and what they mean to you as an IT manager.

 

1) Multi-core CPUs

 

I was surprised (and a little dismayed) at a recent data center engineering workshop where I discovered that there were still a lot of engineers who perceived that Intel CPUs were still getting hotter and hotter over time. This hasn’t been the case for several years, and it’s because of multi-core technology. Since CPU power goes up with the square of the clock frequency it’s clear that we can’t just continue to run clocks faster and faster. Here’s a simple set of numbers to understand how multi-core works: If you increase the clock speed on a core by 20% you increase its power consumption by 73%. If you reduce the clock by 13% you reduce by power by 49% (but you still get 87% of the performance for most software). So let’s put two of these slower cores together – they consume the same power as the original core but provide 73% greater performance at that same power level. So you can see that multi-core is a key component of energy efficient CPUs.

 

2) 45nm High-K metal gate technology

 

The biggest recent advance in semiconductor technology is 45nm High-K metal gate technology. There is a ton of information that you can find on the intel.com website, but let’s hit the most important points. At these tiny topologies the insulation layer on a transistor is down to a width of 4 or 5 ATOMS, so there is a much greater opportunity for energy to escape through that insulator. The new materials we are using provide a much more effective insulator, and the result is that our new CPUs can run at higher frequencies (and therefore higher performance) with no increase in power consumption.

 

3) Microarchitecture

 

The microarchitecture is the foundation of how the CPU performs computing operations. Intel Core™ microarchitecture is optimized for multi-core CPUs and provides higher performance in the following ways:

  • More instructions per clock cycle (increase from 3 to 4)

  • Smart cache to reduce latency to frequently used data

  • Smart memory access with built-in intelligence to speculatively load data for instructions that are about to execute

  • New instructions that double the speed of execution of a wide range of video, imaging, financial, engineering and scientific applications

The microarchitecture also includes new instructions to increase energy efficiency. For data centers this means lower power and thermal burdens. For mobile users this means greater battery life and smaller form factors.

 

4) The “tick tock” model

 

Developing a new microarchitecture is a lot of hard work with a lot of extremely difficult technical challenges to overcome. So is a process shrink that reduces the distance between transistors and increases the density of the CPU package. To manage these innovations in a predictable and consistent cadence Intel follows the “tick tock” model, introducing a process shrink one year (the “tick”) and a new microarchitecture the next (the “tock”). In 2007 the Penryn CPU was introduced with a process shrink from 65nm to 45nm, as well as the high-k metal gate technology. In 2008 we will introduce the “Nehalem” microarchitecture with a host of new architectural improvements for performance and energy efficiency (see tomorrow’s blog for more details).

 

THE PUNCHLINE:

 

Put all those technology advances together and we have made tremendous strides in performance and energy efficiency. As we progressed from single core CPUs to the latest quad core CPUs performance has increased by 5.85 times with no increase in CPU power consumption.

 

Think of what that means for your data center where you may be worried about power and space. We did a paper calculation of a data center running 5.1 million business operations per second, which would have required 126 servers in 6 racks, requiring 240 square feet of space and 48kW of power in 2004 using the single core CPU of the day. Today with 45nm quad core CPUs the same work can be accomplished with 17 servers filling a fraction of a rack, and requiring only 40 square feet of space and 6kW of power. That’s an 83% reduction in floor space and 87% reduction in energy costs. At current power rates that’s a savings of $53K.

 

I hope I’ve been able to show how the cool technology we’re developing at Intel can translate into bottom line benefits for you as IT managers.

0 Comments Permalink