Originally posted by chuckula
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Intel Quietly Drops Xeon Phi 7200 Coprocessors
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Originally posted by Zucca View PostYeah. AFAIK the PCIe Xeon Phi is basically its own computer running it's own (Linux) OS. I don't remember how much ram those had, but propably not much. Although NFS has swap support (and RDMA), so lending some memory from the "host" OS is possible via the PCIe x16 lane.
It's sad that those Xeon Phi cards don't just work on any regular consumer motherboard. I remember Xeon Phi needing something like larger adressable memory space etc...
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Originally posted by wizard69 View PostInteresting but not a surprise. This particular version just didnt have market acceptance. Phi wasnt a bad concept but not really tackeled in a rational manner. Intel should have focused on a bootable processor that leveraged a standard motherboard and socket in yhe first place.
From this article it appears that newer socketed Phis are still in production so we will see how long this is infact a viable product at Intel. I just see the specialized co processor as a dead end. At least when one uses a GPU as a compute source you have a range of commodity hardawre for the simpler acceleration needs and compatible solutions for more advanced solutions.
Anyway intel will be making a comeback in the enterprise sphere to a limited extent via FPGAs. When/if they crack the software on that which they're making progress on, they'll have a unique product with a permanent market used to those hardware costs and have some perf/watt to win back from GPUs.
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I could still buy a Xeon Phi card (with active cooler preferably) later when (?) the prices drop. Just because then I could have a computer inside my computer and call it "Yo dawg!".
But seriously. I would like to run some long running processes in the OS the card has. The problem is that I'd need to have a motherboard for the task. My server has some AM3+ MB atm.
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Originally posted by nevion View Postcalled it 20x over for the last 8 months - funny how so many people in meatspace didn't believe me. Nobody was buying them, nobody was developing against them except a few national labs for what I guess is computational physics. The things sucked at almost everything, required you to use openacc or something for "real" performance and really only had an advantage where things coelesced more poorly. They lost in perf/$ and raw performance in any other circumstance. Canceling IDF was just a tip of the hand, but I didn't know anyone using them anywhere and barely got access to them.
It was a potential powerhouse for something, but that something was never figured out. A solution looking for a problem.
BTW Michael, you got a shout out for this article on Tom's.
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