this post was submitted on 22 Dec 2023
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[–] hips_and_nips@lemmy.world 3 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Itanium

Now there’s a name I haven’t heard in a long time.

And the Xeon Phi (Knight’s Ferry/Landing) was in the GPU space, but only in GPGPU. The idea was that the Xeon Phi, with an x86-compatible core, could, with less modification, run software that was originally targeted to a standard x86 CPU. Something like 68-70 x86-64 cores.

I had a couple of them when I was taking parallel programming back in the day. Nifty little devices, but largely outshined by distributed multiprocessing for x86-64 and paled in comparison to the power of CUDA. That might be my own bias talking though.

[–] Buffalox@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

paled in comparison to the power of CUDA. That might be my own bias talking though.

I don't have personal experience, but AFAIK that's what everybody says. They were marketed as compute units, but their compute performance was very poor compared to the competition.