
Computer Engineers Design Platform For Mixing Processor Cores To Boost Computers’ Performance
Computers are notable for flexibility, running everything from game consoles to stock exchanges. But at the level of computation, most computers rely on arrays of identical processors called cores. Now, a team at Princeton University has built a hardware platform that allows different kinds of computer cores to fit together, allowing designers to customize systems in new ways.
The goal is to obviously increase efficiency and also speed to create new systems that parcel out tasks among specialized cores.
Despite multi-core cooperating, even more, gains are achievable when cores needn’t all rely on the same basic programming code that tells a core how to handle its processing jobs. Designers call this basic code an Instruction Set Architecture (ISA). Well-established ISAs include Intel x86, commonly found in laptops, ARM in smartphones, and POWER in IBM mainframes. Besides mixing together cores specialized for different ISAs, researchers are also interested in developing hybrid ISAs to underpin new processor designs, exploiting the potential of new, cutting-edge, open-source ISAs like RISC-V ISA.
Recent Posts
- Bitcoin Hovers Near $95K as Post-Halving Scarcity and ETF Demand Rekindle Crypto Bull Run
- Cryptocurrency Stocks Tumble Amidst Market Turbulence Following Trump’s Tariff Announcement
- Bybit Crypto Exchange Hacked, Over $1.4 Billion in Ethereum Stolen in Record-Breaking Breach
- How Meme Coins and Influencers Are Cashing In Like Never Before
- Artificial Intelligence: Revolutionizing Music Production
- Navigating the Complexities of Title IX with Joseph Lento
- This AI-Driven Japanese Company’s Stock Has Soared 400% in 2024
- Jake Paul’s Manager Offers $20mln to IShowSpeed: “Put your signature where your Clout is”
- Is IShowSpeed Going to Be Jake Paul’s Next Boxing Opponent?
- Alessandro Peticchia: An expert in Solar PV and Renewable Energy Projects