Nvidia副总裁称“CPU已死,GPU当立”

今天看到一则有趣的新闻,说Nvidia副总裁在一封给内部人员的邮件中说,CPU已经死了,现在是GPU上位的时候。他还在信中引用了一篇报道以为佐证。在那篇报道中,Nvidia CEO黄仁勋攻击了Intel关于“Nvidia没活路”的言论。

是什么让Nvidia这么理直气壮?GPU真的会替代CPU吗?不做评论,立此存照吧。

下面是邮件全文:

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From: Roy Taylor [mailto:RTaylor@nvidia.com]
Sent: 10 April 2008 23:36
Subject: The best job in the world.
Guys I have the best job in the world. Official. I cant tell you how much fun we're having here right now.
I don't know how much this will mean to you all but for those that don't know a war has just started that will likely be written about for years and which will affect everyone who owns a PC. Everyone.
Basically the CPU is dead. Yes, that processor you see advertised everywhere from Intel. Its run out of steam. The fact is that it no longer makes anything run faster. You don't need a fast one anymore. This is why AMD is in trouble and its why Intel are panicking. They are panicking so much that they have started attacking us. This is because you do still [need] one chip to get faster and faster – the GPU. That GeForce chip. Yes honestly. No I am not making this up. You are my friends and so I am not selling you. This shit is just interesting as hell.
Today your PC plays video (its our chip that makes that work), you play games (its our chip that makes that work), you rip movies (yup our chip again) – you get the picture?
Today we hit back at Intel this is what the press are saying, I thought you'd be interested…
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The visual computing clash: Nvidia CEO opens a can of whoop-ass for Intel
Business and Law
By Theo Valich
Thursday, April 10, 2008 17:12
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Santa Clara (CA) – Nvidia and Intel are on a crash course: With Nvidia moving its GPUs into potential CPU territory and Intel tuning CPUs to take over GPU territory, you have a classic scenario for a confrontation between two industry giants that have the same goal – to shape the era of visual computing. Nvidia's chief executive officer Jen-Hsun Huang today lashed out at recent Intel announcements and claims that indicated how the company wants to build up its graphics front line. Huang chose strong, emotional words to strike back, calling Intel's second discrete visual computing offering "Laughabee".
Huang, known for his great passion for the company he founded, apparently has been hit on the wrong nerve. He opened Nvidia's financial analyst day by explaining that "Nvidia is a Visual Computing company, not a semiconductor corporation" and that his goal is nothing else but "to make GPUs better and deliver great experience". But the opening lines quickly shifted into another dimension when he compared Intel's performance roadmap from IDF Spring 2008 and Nvidia's current products.
"Intel is false. They have crossed the line, they're saying false things."
"They say", Huang stated, "Nvidia is going to be dead. Their graphics are good, but we'll put graphics into the CPU and there is no place for them to stick it." He went on to compare Intel's current Core 2 platform with the next-gen processors and said that it would be "nothing else but putting more transistors [on it] instead of thinking of a solution."
"People don't buy Nvidia products because they have to, because they're allowed to. They buy our stuff because they want to. They're overwhelmed by the value and the benefit we bring," Huang noted.
"This team [Nvidia] is like a Ferrari team. We know how to bring visual technology to life. We bring 20-30-40x the performance advantage and 27x the price/performance ratio". Even if Intel was able to deliver a 10-fold performance increase, the company would still not be able to reach catch up with Nvidia and AMD in the discrete space, Huang said.
Jen-Hsun also commented on article by Jon Peddie showing the last ten years of the graphics market, recently published on TG Daily, stating that Nvidia went through a lot of competitors and sees Intel just one of them.
Intel's Larrabee was called "Laughabee". Much of the performance provided by this card in fact will depend on quality drivers for DirectX and OpenGL APIs. Huang openly doubted that Intel can deliver workable drivers, judging by their current state of incompatibility. Bear in mind that Intel's integrated graphics parts don't yield great results in Microsoft DCT tests, and most of the issues are waived by WHQL Labs due to the lack of hardware support. Then again, you should not consider Intel's integrated graphics being garbage because of waivers on the DCT test (Nvidia had the same issues with GeForce FX and 6/7 series of products).
Over the past few weeks, numerous Intel representatives were talking about Intel's visual computing ideas – starting with Paul Otellini's presentation at the firm's analyst day, Pat Gelsinger's pre-IDF briefing and more aggressive information that was coming out of IDF. Ranging from the integration of graphics into the Nehalem CPU to the company's first discrete graphics card, for which the company is creating lots of hype.
We were willing to give Intel benefit of the doubt on future parts, but the fact of the matter is that their current integrated graphics systems will probably end up costing Microsoft billions of dollars and an integrated PC platform that is believed to be slowly pushing the mainstream PC market into the console market. Given the amount of issues that Intel integrated graphics faces today, including the criticism coming from industry gurus such as Tim Sweeney and John Carmack, you could expect Nvidia to go take aim at Intel today.
While it certainly looks that Intel and Nvidia are heading into a confrontation, it appears that some information may also got out of hand. For example, we were contacted by Intel about a recent article in which an Intel engineer stated that people "probably" won't need graphics cards in the future anymore. In a statement sent to us by email, the company said:
"Intel is not predicting the end of the discrete graphics business. Moore's Law has allowed Intel to innovate and integrate. As a result, we expect that we and others will integrate graphics and visual computing capabilities directly into our CPUs in the future much like floating point coprocessors and other multimedia functions have in the past. However, we don't expect that this integration will eliminate the market for higher-end discrete graphics cards and the value they provide."
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Roy Taylor
VP Content Business Development (CBD) Relations
NVIDIA Corp,. Cell +1 408 XXX XXXX
This email message is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message.
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