"The Era of General Purpose Computers is Ending"
From The Next Platform:
Moore’s Law has underwritten a remarkable period of growth and
stability for the computer industry. The doubling of transistor density
at a predictable cadence has fueled not only five decades of increased
processor performance, but also the rise of the general-purpose
computing model. However, according to a pair of researchers at MIT and
Aachen University, that’s all coming to an end.
Neil Thompson Research Scientist at MIT’s Computer Science and A.I.
Lab and a Visiting Professor at Harvard, and Svenja Spanuth, a graduate
student from RWTH Aachen University, contend what we have been covering
here at The Next Platform all along; that the disintegration
of Moore’s Law, along with new applications like deep learning and
cryptocurrency mining, are driving the industry away from
general-purpose microprocessors and toward a model that favors
specialized microprocessor. “The rise of general-purpose computer chips
has been remarkable. So, too, could be their fall,” they argue.
As they point out, general-purpose computing was not always the norm.
In the early days of supercomputing, custom-built vector-based
architectures from companies like Cray dominated the HPC industry. A
version of this still exists today in the vector systems built by NEC.
But thanks to the speed at which Moore’s Law has improved the
price-performance of transistors over the last few decades, the economic
forces has greatly favored general-purpose processors.
That’s mainly because the cost of developing and manufacturing a
custom chip is between $30 and $80 million. So even for users demanding
high performance microprocessors, the benefit of adopting a specialized
architecture is quickly dissipated as the shrinking transistors in
general-purpose chips erases any initial performance gains afforded by
customized solutions. Meanwhile, the costs incurred by transistor
shrinking can be amortized across millions of processors.
But the computational economics enabled by Moore’s Law is now
changing. In recent years, shrinking transistors has become much more
expensive as the physical limitations of the underlying semiconductor
material begins to assert itself. The authors point out that in the past
25 years, the cost to build a leading edge fab has risen 11 percent per
year. In 2017, the Semiconductor Industry Association estimated that it
costs about $7 billion to construct a new fab. Not only does that drive
up the fixed costs for chipmakers, it has reduced the number
semiconductor manufacturers from 25, in 2002, to just four today: Intel,
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), Samsung and
GlobalFoundries....MORE