Saturday, March 28, 2015
NVIDIA Unveils Tegra K1 A 192 Core Super Chip
NVIDIA also has some great new things to unveil at CES 2014, and among them is the Tegra K1, their latest processor. Making a huge jump from the Tegra 4 the all new Tegra K1 brings 192 cores to the game. This chip, which NVIDIA calls a super chip, will be fully programmable by applications, and will allow all of the cores to be used in parallel making it more efficient.
The chip is based on the Kepler technology which will be able to bridge the gap between many of their products all while giving the best experience to every user. Kepler -- first introduced in desktop and notebook systems, and later brought to workstations and supercomputers -- is the worlds fastest and most energy-efficient GPU architecture. Tens of millions of Kepler-based graphics cards and systems have been shipped, including the GeForce GTX 780 Ti.
The chip is based on the Kepler technology which will be able to bridge the gap between many of their products all while giving the best experience to every user. Kepler -- first introduced in desktop and notebook systems, and later brought to workstations and supercomputers -- is the worlds fastest and most energy-efficient GPU architecture. Tens of millions of Kepler-based graphics cards and systems have been shipped, including the GeForce GTX 780 Ti.
The Tegra K1 processor sets new mobile standards by supporting the latest PC-class gaming technologies, enabling it to run sophisticated gaming engines like Epic Games Unreal Engine 4. It delivers advanced computation capabilities to speed the development of applications for computer vision and speech recognition. And its extraordinary efficiency delivers higher performance than any other mobile GPU at the same power level.
Tegra K1 is offered in two compatible versions. The first uses a 32-bit quad-core, 4-Plus-1™ ARM Cortex A15 CPU. The second version uses a custom, NVIDIA-designed 64-bit dual Super Core CPU. This CPU (named "Denver") delivers very high single-thread and multi-thread performance. It is based on the ARMv8 architecture, which brings the energy-efficient heritage of ARM processor technology to 64-bit computing.
NVIDIA will tell more details on the chip in the coming months.
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