Getting to Zettascale Without Needing Multiple Nuclear Power Plants
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Getting To Zettascale Without Needing Multiple Nuclear Power Plants:
There's no resting on your laurels in the HPC world, no time to sit back and bask in a hard-won accomplishment that was years in the making. The ticker tape has only now been swept up in the wake of the long-awaited celebration last year of finally reaching the exascale computing level, with the Frontier supercomputer housed at the Oak Ridge National Labs breaking that barrier.
With that in the rear-view mirror, attention is turning to the next challenge: Zettascale computing, some 1,000 times faster than what Frontier is running. In the heady months after his heralded 2021 return to Intel as CEO, Pat Gelsinger made headlines by saying the giant chip maker was looking at 2027 to reach zettascale.
Lisa Su, the chief executive officer who has led the remarkable turnaround at Intel's chief rival AMD, took the stage at ISSCC 2023 to talk about zettascale computing, laying out a much more conservative - some would say reasonable - timeline.
Looking at supercomputer performance trends over the past two-plus decades and the ongoing innovation in computing - think advanced package technologies, CPUs and GPUs, chiplet architectures, the pace of AI adoption, among others - Su calculated that the industry could reach the zettabyte scale within the next 10 years or so.
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