Here is a list of articles related to HOT CHIPS mentioned in the news media.


CMU promises to fix speech recognition with a chip

Date: August 22, 2006.
Publication: The Register | Hardware

Hot Chips -- Speech technology ranks right down there with flying cars, robots and Windows as the grandest of disappointments in geekdom. Thankfully, the horrid state of the technology hasn't broken the will of all researchers in the speech field.

In fact, one team at Carnegie Mellon University optimistically thinks they may have solved the speech recognition conundrum with a new chip. Read more...

Geeks pray $100,000 box will solve software crisis

Date: August 22, 2006.
Publication: The Register

Hot Chips -- In order to test out cutting edge code and hardware, a group of computing aficionados – both academics and free range researchers - has teamed up to create the RAMP (Research Accelerator for Multiple Processors) system. This "MIT Fix" isn't a supercomputer, as one might be inclined to think. Rather it's a relatively cheap 1,000 node machine made out of FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays) that can serve as a practical test system for futuristic system designs. Read more...

Sun confirms all about 64-thread Niagra II

Date: August 22, 2006.
Publication: The Register

Hot Chips -- Sun Microsystems will later today reveal the inner goo behind its Niagara II processor – the second chip in the company's "radical" multi-core line. Read more...

Intel readies 'Tulsa' Xeon debut

Date: August 22, 2006.
Publication: C|Net News

PALO ALTO, Calif. -- "Tulsa will be introduced next week at about a 70 percent higher performance rate," compared with its "Paxville MP" predecessor introduced in November, Intel's Jeffrey Gilbert said in a speech at the Hot Chips conference here. His presentation's fine print added more detail, saying the Tulsa launch is scheduled for Aug. 29. Read more...

Clockless core set to lead HOT CHIPS embedded session

Date: June 8, 2006.
Publication: EETimes Europe

LONDON — European companies are set to dominate the embedded processors session of the upcoming HotChips conference scheduled to take place at Stanford University (Palo Alto, Calif.), Aug. 20 to 22. The ARM996HS core was introduced to the market in February 2006 with simulations that showed the core, touted as the electronics industry’s first commercially available clockless processor core, could cut power consumption to about one third of that of a similar clocked processor core from ARM Holdings plc. Read more...

Intel set to present 'Core' microarchitecture at HOT CHIPS

Date: June 7, 2006.
Publication: EETimes

LONDON — Jack Doweck of Intel Corp. is scheduled to present details of the “Core” microarchitecture at the HotChips conference coming up at Stanford University, Aug. 20 to 22. The Core microarchitecture, not to be confused with the Core Duo processor, was first introduced to the market at the Intel Developers Forum in San Francisco in March. Read more...

HOT CHIPS' message: It's the bandwidth

Date: July 18, 2005.
Publication: EETimes

The most influential trends in high-performance IC architecture will be on full display at Hot Chips 17 next month, in papers that will highlight the growing importance of such areas as consumer markets, parallel architectures and power. Read more...



Copyright© HOT CHIPS, 2006. All rights reserved.
All trademarks property of their owners. Valid HTML & CSS.