Method identified to double computer processing speeds

By University of California – Riverside  FEB 22, 2024 
https://techxplore.com/news/2024-02-method.html  Credit: CC0 Public Domain


Imagine doubling the processing power of your smartphone, tablet, personal 
computer, or server using the existing hardware already in these devices.

Hung-Wei Tseng, a UC Riverside associate professor of electrical and computer 
engineering, has laid out a paradigm shift in computer architecture to do just 
that in a paper titled, "Simultaneous and Heterogeneous Multithreading."

https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3613424.3614285

Tseng explained that today's computer devices increasingly have graphics 
processing units (GPUs), hardware accelerators for artificial intelligence (AI) 
and machine learning (ML), or digital signal processing units as essential 
components.

These components process information separately, moving information from one 
processing unit to the next, which in effect creates a bottleneck.

In their paper, Tseng and UCR computer science graduate student Kuan-Chieh Hsu 
introduce what they call "simultaneous and heterogeneous multithreading" or 
SHMT.

They describe their development of a proposed SHMT framework on an embedded 
system platform that simultaneously uses a multi-core ARM processor, an NVIDIA 
GPU, and a Tensor Processing Unit hardware accelerator.

The system achieved a 1.96 times speedup and a 51% reduction in energy 
consumption.

"You don't have to add new processors because you already have them," Tseng 
said.

The implications are huge.

Simultaneous use of existing processing components could reduce computer 
hardware costs while also reducing carbon emissions from the energy produced to 
keep servers running in warehouse-size data processing centers. It also could 
reduce the need for scarce freshwater used to keep servers cool.

Tseng's paper, however, cautions that further investigation is needed to answer 
several questions about system implementation, hardware support, code 
optimization, and what kind of applications stand to benefit the most, among 
other issues.

The paper was presented at the 56th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on 
Microarchitecture held in October in Toronto, Canada.



More information: Kuan-Chieh Hsu et al, Simultaneous and Heterogenous 
Multithreading, 56th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on 
Microarchitecture (2023). DOI: 10.1145/3613424.3614285
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to