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Have you heard of the Intel tick-tock model? A 'tick' represents a ...
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Tick-tock is a model adopted in 2007 by chip manufacturer Intel. Under this model, every microarchitecture change is followed with a die shrink of the process technology.


Video Tick-tock model



History

Every "tick" represented a shrinking of the process technology of the previous microarchitecture (sometimes introducing new instructions, as with Broadwell, released in late 2014) and every "tock" designated a new microarchitecture. Every year to 18 months, there is expected to be one tick or tock.

In 2014, Intel created a "tock refresh" of a tock in the form of a smaller update to the microarchitecture not considered a new generation in and of itself. In March 2016, Intel announced in a Form 10-K report that it deprecated the tick-tock cycle in favor of a three-step "process-architecture-optimization" model, under which three generations of processors will be produced with a single manufacturing process, with the third generation out of three focusing on optimization. The first optimization of the Skylake architecture was Kaby Lake. Intel then announced a second optimization, Coffee Lake, making a total of four generations at 14 nm.

Intel believes that it will be possible to reach at least 7 nm, perhaps using indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) or graphene rather than silicon.


Maps Tick-tock model



Roadmap

Note: There is further the Xeon Phi. It has up to now undergone four development steps with a current top model that got the code name Knights Landing (shortcut: KNL; the predecessor code names all had the leading term Knights in their name) that is derived from the Silvermont architecture as used for the Intel Atom series but realized in a shrunk 14 nm (FinFET) technology.



Intel处理器的Tick-Tockå'展模式â€
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See also

  • List of Intel CPU microarchitectures
  • Process-Architecture-Optimization model

Intel will release 8th-gen Coffee Lake chips this yearâ€
src: cdn.arstechnica.net


References


10K Document 12.27.2014
src: www.sec.gov


External links

  • "Intel Tick-Tock Model of Architecture & Silicon Cadence". Intel.com. Intel Corporation. 
  • Intel Tick-Tock Model at IDF 2009, Anandtech.com
  • "Intel Tick-Tock Model at IDF 2011" (PDF). Intel.com. Intel Corporation. p. 21. 

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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