So you’ve probably heard about GPGPU and have a vague idea about what it does. But where did it come from and how does it really work? Here are five things you might not have realised about GPGPU technology.
It may read like an acronym created by someone who’s spent too long listening to ‘My Generation’, but GPGPU is a technology which will be increasingly important over the coming years.
The concept isn’t hard to grasp. A modern CPU is a very clever piece of silicon, but a modern GPU has been honed to do its specialised tasks an order of magnitude more quickly. Those tasks originally revolved around rendering 3D graphics as fast as possible with the best quality available. But behind the pretty visuals lie complicated geometric calculations, so the same silicon and programming concepts can also be harnessed to execute all manner of alternative functions. This is General Purpose computation on GPUs, or GPGPU for short.
Essentially, anything which can be broken down into repetitive algorithms could be accelerated by a graphics card. The likely candidates include physics calculation, scientific modelling, financial forecasting, and other intensive data-processing tasks. ATi first brought GPGPU to public attention with its Stream Computing initiative, and we reported on how ATi’s graphics cards could be harnessed to accelerate folding, a scientific modelling application analysing how proteins are assembled.
However, GPGPU is not being investigated solely by ATi. Nvidia GPUs can do it too, and Intel is also believed to be exploring the territory with its Larrabee initiative.
So yes, you’ve probably heard about GPGPU and have a vague idea about what it does. But where did it come from and how does it really work? Scroll down and check out five things you might not have realised about GPGPU technology.
He didn't say they could do folding he said they could potentially be general purpose. The key is in the punctuation.
he didnt say they could do folding he said they could potentially be general purpose. The key is in the punctuation.
Hummmm, unless I am mistaken, which I am not, Nvidia does NOT do folding - nor probably will the upcoming Tesla. Nvidia have single handedly decided not to fix this issue.....witness the link in the article "Nvidia GPU's can do it too..." No they can't - the linked to article was written, and I quote "Posted at: 12:00am 17th November 2006 By Ben Hardwidge". It is a known fact that as far as Nvidia are concerned there is a compiler problem in Brook/Cuda and they seem to refuse to help in fixing it. I would love to fold with Nvidia but they simply seem incapable, or care. With millions of Nvidia users and they can't get this "simple" thing right - who would trust them to get cutting edge science to work. Yes GPGPU looks good but - at the moment (or at least for the last year) only ATI can deliver... regards Sean
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