During the online Intel Innovation 2021 event, Intel announced today a unified Developer Zone for accessing application programming interfaces (APIs) that it makes available via a oneAPI toolkit to IT teams that want to more easily invoke a wide range of processor types and classes.
At the same time, the company also revealed it is creating a set of oneAPI centers of excellence that will make it easier for DevOps teams to consume those APIs. Partners participating in that initiative include Oak Ridge National Laboratory, University of California Berkeley, University of Durham and University of Tennessee. Intel will also make the Intel Graphics Visualization Institutes of Xellence part of this program.
Next year, Intel is also promising to deliver oneAPI 2022 toolkits that will add 900 additional capabilities including an ability to develop applications for CPUs and graphical processor units using what Intel described as the first unified C++/SYCL/Fortran compiler.
The company is also planning on making available Data Parallel Python tools in addition to expanding its Advisor accelerator performance modeling tools to include support for VTune Flame Graph to visualize performance hot spots.
There will also be additional oneAPI integrations to add support for Microsoft Visual Studio Code and the Microsoft Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 platform. Intel also created an Intel oneAPI AI Analytics toolkit to enable out-of-the-box AI development that is supported by workstations running Linux from Dell Technologies, HP and Lenovo. Additionally, Microsoft and Intel have agreed to create a complete data science toolchain to Windows 11 that will become part of the Surface Laptop Studio framework for building applications.
Greg Lavender, chief technology officer, senior vice president and general manager of the software and advanced technology group at Intel, said it’s critical to make sure that DevOps teams add support for the acceleration engine and extensions that Intel makes available within its processors to the runtime environments they deploy. Otherwise, developers will never be able to routinely invoke those capabilities to build next-generation applications.
The company also revealed that next-generation Intel Xeon Scalable Processors, code-named Sapphire Rapids, will have additional acceleration engines to both simplify deployments at scale and optimize processors’ core utilization in a way that reduces power consumption. Overall, Intel is promising up to a 30x total performance gain for artificial intelligence (AI) applications running on these processors.
Other hardware advances announced today include a 12th generation Intel Core family based on 7-nanometer processors and a Mount Evans project through which Intel is collaborating with Google Cloud to build processors based on application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) chips.
The company also unveiled an Intel ArcTM Alchemist family of graphics systems on chips (SoCs) that take advantage of machine learning algorithms to optimize performance and touted an Intel Tofino fabric processor (IFP) that adds intelligence to network switching via support for P4 programming tools.
Finally, the company noted that an Aurora supercomputer, due out in 2022, will exceed two exaflops of peak double-precision compute performance.
As Intel seeks to regain the processor high ground from rivals such as NVIDIA, ARM and AMD, it’s clear that the future of IT will be defined by a broad range of processor classes that all have unique capabilities. The challenge now is deciding which of those capabilities to actually make available to developers that are largely dependent on the runtime environment that DevOps teams decide to make available.
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