SAN JOSE, Calif., Feb. 23, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Altera
Corporation (NASDAQ: ALTR) today announced Microsoft is using
Altera Arria® 10 FPGAs (field programmable gate arrays), to
achieve compelling performance-per-Watt in data center acceleration
based on CNN (convolutional neural network) algorithms. These
algorithms are frequently used for image classification, image
recognition, and natural language processing. Altera is presenting
how FPGAs are accelerating data center search at two key industry
events this week: FPGA 2015 ACM/SIGDA in
Monterey, California, on
February 23 and the Linley Group
Data Center Conference in San Jose,
California, on February
25.
Microsoft researchers are working on advancing cloud
technologies and are using the Arria 10 Developer Kit and
engineering samples of Arria 10 FPGAs, which are demonstrating
up to 40 GFLOPS-per-Watt, an industry-leading level in data
center performance. Also, when compared with GPGPUs, this FPGA
performance offers a more than 3X performance-to-power
advantage for CNN platforms. This performance is achieved
using the open software development language known as OpenCL, or
VHDL to code the Arria 10 FPGA and its IEEE754 hard floating point
DSP (digital signal processing) blocks.
"We are seeing a significant leap forward in CNN performance and
power efficiency with Arria 10 engineering samples and the
silicon's precision hard floating point in the DSP blocks is part
of the reason we are seeing compelling results in our research,"
said Doug Burger, director,
Client and Cloud Apps, Microsoft Research. In a Microsoft blog
post, http://bit.ly/1FeqznT Burger describes some of the
challenges facing the data center at an infrastructure level and
how by replacing traditional CPUs with reprogrammable FPGAs,
Microsoft is addressing these challenges.
"The FPGA has an architectural advantage for neural algorithms
with the ability to convolve and do pooling very efficiently with a
flexible data path which enables many OpenCL kernels to pass data
directly to each other without having to go to external memory,"
said Michael Strickland, director
of the Compute and Storage Business Unit, Altera. "Arria 10 has
an additional architectural advantage of supporting hard floating
point for both multiplication and addition – this hard floating
point enables more logic and a faster clock speed than traditional
FPGA products."
Altera previously announced that Microsoft is using its Stratix
V FPGAs to accelerate search on its innovative Catapult board being
deployed in servers in the first Bing data center
later this year.
About Altera
Altera programmable solutions enable
designers of electronic systems to rapidly and cost effectively
innovate, differentiate and win in their markets. Altera offers
FPGAs, SoCs, CPLDs, and complementary technologies, such as
power management, to provide high-value solutions to
customers worldwide. Visit www.altera.com.
ALTERA, ARRIA, CYCLONE, ENPIRION, MAX, MEGACORE, NIOS, QUARTUS
and STRATIX words and logos are trademarks of Altera Corporation
and registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other
countries. All other words and logos identified as trademarks or
service marks are the property of their respective holders as
described at www.altera.com/legal
Related Quotes
Altera 20 nm FPGAs with Hard Floating Point DSP Demonstrate
Industry-leading Performance and Power Efficiency
Many companies are using Altera Arria® 10 FPGA products with
on-board hard floating point DSP to achieve compelling
performance-per-Watt. Altera is working closely with
customers and partners on solutions for high performance computing
(HPC), data center acceleration, and financial systems.
Microsoft – Doug
Burger, Director of Client and Cloud Apps
"We are seeing a significant leap forward in CNN performance and
power efficiency with Arria 10 engineering samples, and the
silicon's precision hard floating point in the DSP blocks is part
of the reason we are seeing compelling results in our research,"
said Doug Burger, director, Client
and Cloud Apps, Microsoft Research. In a Microsoft blog
post, http://bit.ly/1FeqznT
Bittware - Jeff Milrod,
President and CEO, Bittware
"Altera's Arria 10 is a true game changer. Native
floating-point engines on these devices give system designers
access to massive floating-point resources with tremendous
ease-of-use and power efficiency in an FPGA. Classic signal
processing applications can now interface analog signals directly
to Arria 10 and process them there in floating point," said
Jeff Milrod, president and CEO,
Bittware. "For HPC and acceleration applications, FPGA algorithms
no longer need to be ported to fixed point, nor do they need to be
inefficiently implemented in fixed-point emulation of floating
point. The Arria 10's native floating point provides more than 40
GFLOPS/W with a higher Fmax, while using only one-third of the
logic resources. It is easier to use, lower power, faster, and less
resource-intensive than any other alternative previously
available."
Gidel - Reuven
Weintraub, Founder and CTO, Gidel
"We are enthusiastic about the Altera Arria 10's unprecedented
flops-per-power performance. For a long time, FPGAs excelled in
performance-per-power for bit, byte and then integer processing,"
said Reuven Weintraub, founder and
CTO, Gidel. "The Altera Arria 10's tremendous
floating-point-per-power opens the way for Gidel products to be a
great fit for many more HPC and DSP applications."
Nallatech - Allan
Cantle, President and Founder, Nallatech
"Nallatech has ported several of our customers' production codes
that required floating point math using Altera's OpenCL compiler.
By targeting these at the new Arria 10 FPGA with dedicated
floating-point DSPs, we can see savings in logic resource usage,
increased clock frequencies and further improvements in
performance/watt metrics, making Nallatech's new Arria 10-based
accelerators more compelling for a wider range of application
areas," said Allan Cantle, president
and founder, Nallatech.
ReFLEX CES - Yann Casteignau, Principal
Engineer, ReFLEX CES
"The ReFLEX CES recently-released FPGA boards based on Altera
Arria10 FPGAs will largely benefit from the new floating-point DSP
blocks implemented in this Generation10 FPGA family," said Yann
Casteignau, principal engineer, ReFLEX CES. "Our target is to give
customers a significant GFLOPS/W ratio increase (ratio of three is
expected), and at the same time, reduce the logic required to
implement complex floating-point computations, leaving maximum
space for custom design implementation. Many of our customers use
ReFLEX CES boards for high performance computing, and power
consumption is often a challenge. With Arria10 FPGAs, the power
consumption is reduced for better computing performances. The
Arria10 new hard-coded DSP floating-point operator is a decisive
advantage for ReFLEX CES boards when it comes to increasing
performance, reducing the logic needs, and optimizing the GFLOPS/W
ratio."
Editor Contact:
Karin
Taylor
Altera Corporation
(408) 544-8207
newsroom@altera.com
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SOURCE Altera Corporation