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Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve
Ballmer pauses as he delivers a speech in Zurich October 4, 2007.
(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, March 19 (Xinhuanet) -- Intel and Microsoft
will develop parallel computing that allows computers to run faster by dividing
tasks over multiple microprocessors instead of using a single processor to
perform one task at a time, media reported Wednesday.
The two companies committed 20 million
U.S. dollars over the next five years to create research centers
focused on parallel computing at two U.S. universities, University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign and University of California, Berkeley. The two schools will
contribute 15 million dollars toward the research centers.
"Parallelism is the path forward to the unprecedented
levels of performance that are needed ... to keep this growth going," said
Andrew Chien, director of Intel research.
The technology industry has been driven by the 1965
observation by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore for many years that the
computing power of chips doubles roughly every two years, in what has become
known as Moore's Law.
Parallel computing has been hyped for years as the
next big thing in technology, but the time has come, Microsoft, Intel and the
universities said, to make it a reality.
It could lead to major advances in robotics or
software that could translate documents in real time in multiple languages, for
example, or a digital personal health care assistant.
"We're really in the midst of a revolution in the
computing industry," said Tony Hey, executive vice president of external
research at Microsoft Research, "and it really will profoundly affect the way we
develop software" for supercomputers, server computers that form the backbone of
corporate networks, desktop and laptop computers, as well as, ultimately,
handheld devices.
(Agencies)
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Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduces the new
Intel "Core 2 Duo" chip for the MacBook Air during the Macworld Convention
and Expo in San Francisco, California, January 15, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
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