Today Arm announced its next-generation cores for higher performance per core applications. Dubbed the Arm Neoverse V2 or “Demeter” core design, this will be the core design used for the NVIDIA Grace CPU when it launches in 2023.
The Arm Neoverse V2 platform is a new Armv9 core that is designed for higher performance than the N2 cores.
I'm not ot sure if we're involved, but I've speculated previously if it would be possible for AKIDA to be combined in the new Arm V9 cores thus inproving efficiency and perfomance without additional power consumption.
In the article below it states "Arm Vice President of Product Solutions Dermot O’Driscoll explained that "the cloud infrastructure of tomorrow will need to be able to handle an explosion of new data while effectively processing increasingly more complex workloads. At the same time, customers want to see increased power efficiency too, as they look to minimize their carbon footprints. In particular, he said customers are looking for solutions that push cloud workload performance without additional power and area requirements."
UPDATED 20:00 EDT / SEPTEMBER 14 2022
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Arm unveils updated Neoverse CPU roadmap, targeting cloud, hyperscale and HPC workloads
Mike Wheatley
British semiconductor firm
Arm Ltd. today
unveiled a revamped product roadmap with new processor designs that it says will provide a foundation for multiple kinds of workloads over the next few years.
Arm’s roadmap sees the addition of Arm Neoverse V2, code-named Demeter, a new processor that’s expected to play a key role in data centers years into the future. The company said its latest core is built to provide the highest per-thread performance for cloud, hyperscale and high-performance computing workloads.
In an online presentation, Arm Chief Executive Rene Haas said industry leaders across cloud, HPC, 5G and edge computing have selected Arm Neoverse as the compute foundation for multiple next-generation infrastructure platforms.
Arm Neoverse was introduced in 2018 as the company’s answer to Intel Corp.’s Xeon processors and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.’s Epyc chips, and has
since evolved to three distinct platforms — the Arm V-series, N-series and E-series — each of which is aimed at different compute tasks.
What’s more, it will be coming soon. Arm said multiple partners are already working to get their chip designs based on Neoverse V2 to market. One of these is Nvidia Corp., which is using the V2 as the foundation for its new Grace data center central processing unit. Grace is said to combine the power efficiency of V2 with LPDDR5X memory to deliver twice the performance per watt compared with servers powered by traditional architectures.
Arm said Nvidia’s Grace CPUs are already in manufacturing and that several other customers also have chips based on the V2 blueprint in late-stage development. Those customers include the likes of Ampere Computing LLC, Marvell Technologies Inc. and Amazon Web Services Inc.
Less information was provided about the upcoming N-series and E-series chip designs, which are set for a 2023 launch. While the V-series cores are designed to push the limits of performance, the N-series chips are tailored for applications where thread count is prioritized over single-threaded performance. Meanwhile, the Arm E-series cores are meant for data plane processing applications such as edge networking, 5G RAN and other kinds of acceleration.
Arm said the third iteration of its N-series core designs is in development and will be available to partners later next year. The E2’s successor is currently under development and should also be available next year.
Sept. 14, 2022 — The demand for data is insatiable, from 5G to the cloud to smart cities. As a society we want more autonomy, information to fuel our decisions and habits, and connection – to people, stories, and experiences. To address these demands, the cloud infrastructure of tomorrow will...
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