Looking To The Future

While today is Conroe’s 10 year anniversary, I was a post-teenage system builder when it was first released. Now, as AnandTech’s CPU editor, it has been fun for me to delve back into the past and revisit some of the fundamental design changes that would steer a significant amount of Intel’s future design. You can certainly feel many of the technologies used in the Core microarchitecture in Skylake today, including operation fusion and large shared caching. Now of course, a number of technologies have been developed since which make a big difference too, such as micro-op caches from Sandy Bridge, an L3 cache, even adaptations for eDRAM and moving the memory controller and north bridge on-die. But it does make me wonder if there will be another Intel microarchitecture as important as this down the line. On the AMD side of the fence, everyone is looking at Zen with wide eyes and anticipation. While we have been told not to expect it to take the performance crown, a number of users and industry analysts hope that it brings more competition to the x86 space, enough to rekindle the competitive spirit in silicon back in the mid-2000s.

Looking into the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors report, and even just the 50-page summary, there are a large number of predictions in the industry that could happen. There are thousands of people working to make sure the next process node, and the one after that, happens with good yields and on time. The report goes into detail about how shrinking that process won’t happen forever, which is a sentiment that the industry has had for a while, and it lays out in a series of working groups what needs to happen at each stage of the process to go beyond Moore’s Law, specifically regarding silicon stacking, TSVs, and the movement to 3D chips. The ITRS report is set to be the last, with the new focus on devices, systems, SiP and other technologies beyond Moore’s Law. Some have heralded the lack of a future ITRS report as a stark warning, however the fact that we can’t keep shrinking forever has been a known fact, especially at the point where most businesses won’t shrink a process node unless it can net them an overall profit. The movement to 3D makes everything a lot more complicated, but it has to happen in order to provide semiconductor growth and improvements beyond 2D.

Sources

Johan’s Conroe vs K8 Architecture Deep Dive, 2006
Anand’s Core 2 Extreme and Core 2 Duo Review, 2006
International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors 2.0 Report, 2015/2016

Addendum: This article originally stated that the Core 2 Duo/Conroe was derived in part from the Pentium Pro. This was due to typo in the original 2006 article and has since been adjusted.

Looking To The Future: Mobile with 32 CPU Cores and 8K Displays
Comments Locked

158 Comments

View All Comments

  • saratoga4 - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    >As we can see, by 2007 it was predicted that we would be on 10nm chips

    Should be 100 nm (0.1 microns).
  • Jehab - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    Yeah, that is a massive error, lol.
  • hammer256 - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    If I remember correctly, intel was running at 65nm in 2007 right? So I guess that was ahead of the curve at the time.
  • JlHADJOE - Saturday, July 30, 2016 - link

    And the 2001 ITR roadmap actually predicted 22nm for 2016. Despite the delays getting to 14/16nm the industry is actually way ahead of the curve.

    http://www2.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/ALS-E...
  • melgross - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    Exactly! I was going to post that myself. Once it's understood that it's actually 100nm, the other numbers make sense, otherwise, they don't.
  • Walkermoon - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    Just signed up to say the same.
  • Ian Cutress - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    Derp, I misread the table in a rush. Updated.
  • Pissedoffyouth - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    Could you bench it against an AMD A10 Kaveri? That would be good
  • Gc - Saturday, July 30, 2016 - link

    AMD A10-7800 (Kaveri) is in three of the bar charts on page 6. It appears to benefit from 4 cores in two of the comparisons.
  • Zaxx420 - Wednesday, July 27, 2016 - link

    Still have a E8400 rig that I use every day...with it o/ced to 4GHz, 8gb of DDR2-1066 and a OCZ Vertex 2 SSD plus it's 6mb of cache on a P45 mobo...it can hold its own to this day...easily. The E8000 series is one of the best 'future proof' cpus ever...next up imo will prove to be Sandy Bridge. Have a 2500K at 4.5GHz on a Z68 mobo, 16gb DDR3-2400 and a Samsung 850 Pro ssd...and now a GTX 1060...plays any game I want at 1080 and max quality...easily.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now