Nvidia Boss Opens First NVISION With Poke At Intel...
Jen-Hsun, kicking off the inaugural NVISION visual computing conference Monday with a lengthy keynote that incorporated demos of cutting edge graphics technology and a chat with Battlestar Galactica star Tricia Helfer, added that "in Moore's Law terms, what we've done with GPUs is extraordinary."
It would not be the last poke at Intel (NSDQ: INTC) during the course of Jen-Hsun's two-and-a-half hour presentation and an additional 45 minutes spent with reporters following the keynote.
NVISION is being held in San Jose, Calif. at a number of venues through Wednesday. Jen-Hsun said in a post-keynote interview session with media that the Santa Clara, Calif.-based graphics chip maker would not be releasing product news at the event, which it intended to be a celebration of visual computing writ large rather than a showcase for Nvidia alone.
"Few technologies have made the leaps that the GPU has over the past 10 years. Years ago, the GPU was really just an accelerator, an application-specific integrated circuit. Now it's a general purpose parallel computing processor," said Jen-Hsun, who is also president and co-founder of Nvidia.
"When I got started in my career in 1984, a Cray X-MP cost $1 million," he said, noting that today's GPUs cost just a few hundred dollars and "their computational capability has reached into the Teraflops, or 1,000 Cray X-MPs."
Meanwhile, smart phones represent the single most important category in computing today, according to the Nvidia boss. Asked about Nvidia's "mobile strategy," Jen-Hsun said Nvidia was "completely focused on Windows Mobile 7."
"Focusing on smart phones. That's our strategy," he said.
Nvidia's specific goals vis-'-vis smart phones include building GeForce platforms for the devices, reversing the current smart phone paradigm of "phone first, computer second," and working with low-power CPU maker VIA to optimize Nvidia products for the Taiwanese chip maker's hardware.
"We're so excited about VIA, we're optimizing our entire software stack for [new VIA CPU] Nano," Jen-Hsun said, noting that Nvidia has only done that for two other chip companies, presumably Intel and AMD.
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