November 9, 2024

Chiplets are officially the future of processor design

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Semiconductor industry titans like Intel, AMD, Samsung, TSMC, and Arm have all come together to announce a new universal chiplet interface which they hope will accelerate chiplet innovation in the future.

The new consortium is called Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express (UCIe), and it’s purpose is to standardize die-to-die interconnects for chipset designs in the future with an open-source approach that any industry player can use.

Absent from the consortium, notably, was Nvidia, but that might not matter much since all three of the world’s leading semiconductor foundries (Intel, TSMC, and Samsung) are participating.

What this means for processor design will ultimately be up to engineers, but in short, this will allow better integration of chiplets, which are smaller processor components that take some of the load off of the central processing cores, which themselves could also be designed as chiplets.

Part of the appeal of UCIe is that it gives the industry more flexibility in processor design in a way that allows it to interface with other components on a motherboard through PCIe and other connections.

Analysis: it’s chiplets all the way down

Chiplet design offers all kinds of advantages over the existing all-in-one-component paradigm.

For one, chiplets do not all need to use the same processor node, so you can have a mix of 5nm chiplets that handle the high-performance tasks alongside 12nm and 14nm chiplets that focus more on less rigorous tasks.

If that sounds a lot like Arm’s big.LITTLE architecture design, you’re not wrong. Chiplets essentially take the advantages of Arm’s design and expands it beyond just the central processing cores.

Another advantage that UCIe brings is the flexibility to adopt more 2.5D and 3D chiplet technology, as our buddies over at Tom’s Hardware explain.

With the new open chiplet standard, industry has an important new tool at its disposal as it grapples with the scaling challenges presented by physics and the coming end of Moore’s Law

So which are the best processors you can buy in 2022?