Legit Event Reviews

Intel IDF 2011 Closing Keynote - Intel CTO Justin Rattner

Manufacturer: Intel
Product: Intel IDF Keynote
Date: Thu, Sep 15, 2011 - 12:00 PM
Written By: Nathan Kirsch -
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JavaScript Physics demo

Intel IDF 2011

Intel says that multi- and many-core processor fears are false and that customers are solving real problems and progress is moving forward. Intel picked out several quotes since the Core 2 Duo processor has come out that show negative press coverage.

Intel IDF 2011

You don't have to be a 'ninja programmer' to actually write applications to be able to use all the cores that are being placed on processors.

Intel IDF 2011

The next guest speaker that Intel brought on stage was Brendan Eich, who works for Mozilla, but was the creator of JavaScript. It is believed that there will be a significant performance increase if able to harness the power of many-core processors.

Intel IDF 2011

Intel showed a JavaScript Physics demo that was running 2-3 FPS and then when using a parallel extension they showed a 15x speedup with the demo running at roughly 45 FPS.

Intel IDF 2011

The demo was run on River Trail, which is open source and available on githum.com/rivertrail. This is the first public demo of parallel extension benchmark.

Intel IDF 2011

The third demonstration was to see if an LTE base station can be built with a multi-core PC. Two years ago, Intel entered into a deal with China Mobile that focused on replacing a traditional base station hardware with 2nd generation Intel Core i7 processors and supporting software. Intel showed off an Intel Sandy Bridge desktop system that now serves as an LTE base station. The vector engines in the processor are acting like Digital Signal Processors .

Intel IDF 2011

The next demo that they had was very cool and it dealt with facial recognition as a biometric encryption for photos on your PC or website. The demo was using some software called MyBookspace and the presenter showed us how it worked with a webcam on a PC. When he was in front of the camera it would show all the images of his friends on the social site as the facial recognition confirmed he was the owner of the content and the PC displayed the images.

Intel IDF 2011

When the speaker walked away from the camera the software recognized the fact that no one was there and removed the content so that no one could see any of the images. The text for the images was still present, so it doesn't fully remove all your data.

Intel IDF 2011

When another person walked in front of the camera the software noted that he had access, but not to all of the images, so the system only displayed the pictures that he was cleared to see.  With people dumping tons of images and videos onto social networking sites it will be interesting to see how technology like this takes off.  We did notice that when two people were on the screen at once the software didn't really know what to do and all the images were shown. If you are at a desk and someone walked up behind you it wouldn't remove any content, which appears like a weakness to us. Nonetheless, this is cool software that has certainly has real world applications in the years to come.

Intel IDF 2011

Using a processor to secure data is nothing new, but the heterogeneous computing model where both the CPU and the GPU are being used at the same time by a single application is still 'new' to many programmers.

Intel IDF 2011

Intel also showed that their processor technology was needed to power this software and that both the CPU and the GPU (processor graphics) were being used. The graphics core bars spiked up real high when the program was trying to identify a new user that came in front of the camera and the CPU was being used to obviously deliver or blur out the content. 

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Review Index
Page 1 - The 10 Year Goal For Many-Core Computing
Page 2 - JavaScript Physics demo
Page 3 - Hybrid DRAM Stack Demo