Kilocore

Multi-core microprocessor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kilocore was a high-performance, low-power multi-core microprocessor that has 1,025 cores designed by Rapport Inc. and IBM and announced in 2006. Rapport was a California fabless semiconductor company founded in 2001 and dissolved in 2009.[1]

Launched2006
Designed byRapport, IBM
Common manufacturer
Max. CPU clock rate125 MHz
Quick facts General information, Launched ...
Kilocore
General information
Launched2006
Designed byRapport, IBM
Common manufacturer
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate125 MHz
Physical specifications
Cores
  • 256, 1024, 1025
Architecture and classification
Instruction setPowerPC
Close

Kilocore contained a single PowerPC processing core, and 1,024 eight-bit Processing Elements running at 125 MHz each, which could be dynamically reconfigured, connected by a shared interconnect. It allows high performance parallel processing.

Rapport's first product to market was the KC256, with 256 8-bit processing elements. The KC256 started shipping in 2006.[2] The elements were grouped in 16 "stripes" of 16 processing elements each, with each stripe able to be dedicated to a particular task.

The "thousand core" products were planned to be the KC1024 and KC1025, due in 2008. Both would have 1024 8-bit processing elements, in a 32 x 32-stripe configuration. The KC1025 has the PowerPC CPU, while the KC1024 has processing elements only.

IBM said that the Kilocore1025 will enable "streaming live- and high-definition video on a low-power, mobile device at 5 to 10 times the speed of existing processors."[3]

Despite raising an additional $18.5 million in 2008,[4] the company dissolved before Kilocore came to market.[1]

References

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