Hello all:
Do you think the Phi processors can get into a new MacPro?
Extremely unlikely. While there are CPU-type socket Phis coming they are going to be socket compatible with > 1 socket Xeon E5 class processor. Intel is going to split 1 socket workstation processors away from 2 or more socket Xeon E5-E7 processors. Xeon Phi is going with the second of those two groups.
Once 1 and >1 sockets families split it is extremely unlikely, Apple is going to chase after the multi-scocket group with pragmatically a single socket product.
There will be a max 14-20 cores, but nothing like the Xeon Phi class in core count.
If not, what do you think can get into a updated MacPro, regardless an updated one can be called MacPro or whatever name Apple marketing uses?
What can go into a Mac Pro? I am not sure why this is even a question. They can use the
same product line they are using now; Xeon E5 1x00 class processors. Just move up. They have done this for the last 10 years. Why go a different path now????? There is little to now rational reason to do so.
They may not be numbered Xeon E5 1600 anymore due to the socket change. Perhaps Xeon E5 1400 ( the second digit is suppose to represent 'socket' class). So either Xeon E5 1600 v4 ( Broadwell-EP for those who want to place codeword bingo as opposed to actual product name. )
http://ark.intel.com/products/family/91287/Intel-Xeon-Processor-E5-v4-Family#@Server
Or if they wait until deep into 2017 something out of the Skylake-W which is essentially a Xeon E5 1600 v5 ( with some probable tweak to socket number designation as it will be different. Or perhaps Intel bumps the > 1 all up to E5 x8xx since E7 class appears to be going away and single socket says at 6... depends upon the numerology mindset the marketing folks are in. ).
[doublepost=1480705471][/doublepost][QUOTE="SoyCapitanSoyCapitan, post: 24009942, member: 976766] .... Phi and Tesla are better to use when scaling up to massive server farms because it helps keep energy use lower than GPUs alone.[/QUOTE]
Phi and Tesla are only hand wavy in the same class. Phi runs an actual operating system ( Linux). Tesla does not. Up until recently the Phi has really been closer to a plug-in board computer than a GPGPU. Much of the technology grew out of a more GPU focused project Intel was running at one time but there is no "raster" , "video" , graphics on fixed function subsystem there are at.
Intel has drivers that you add to the host system ( Linux, Windows ) so that relatively seamlessly interact with the add-in computer as if it was simply a GPGPU extension to the system, but at the core it isn't.
What is going to possible going forward is that there will be Xeon Phi is a "CPU" socket right next to Xeon E5 class packages. They will share memory and resources in a customized OS systems image. It will be possible to build a single socket Phi. However, it is extremely unlikley Apple is going to put time into porting macOS to that. The Phi only system will most likely be Linux..... because Phi
has always run Linux..... so it really isn't a huge change.
Personally I think those socket Phi systems will make for extremely poor "day to day" workstations. A deskside computational computer for specialized loads? Yes. The main GUI computer that someone uses on a daily basis for mainstream tasks; not even close.