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Bernhard Friebe, Intel Programmable Solutions Group | Super Computing 2017


 

>> Announcer: From Denver, Colorado, it's theCUBE. Covering Super Computing 2017 brought to you by Intel. (upbeat music) >> Hey, welcome back everybody. Jeffrey Frick here with theCube. We're in Denver, Colorado at Super Computing 17. I think it's the 20th year of the convention. 12,000 people. We've never been here before. It's pretty amazing. Amazing keynote, really talking about space, and really big, big, big computing projects, so, excited to be here, and we've got our first guest of the day. He's Bernard Friebe, he is the Senior Director of FPGA, I'll get that good by the end of the day, Software Solutions for Intel Programmable group. First off, welcome, Bernard. >> Thank you. I'm glad to be here. >> Absolutely. So, have you been to this conference before? >> Yeah, a couple of times before. It's always a big event. Always a big show for us, so I'm excited. >> Yeah, and it's different, too, cuz it's got a lot of academic influence, as well, as you walk around the outside. It's pretty hardcore. >> Yes, it's wonderful, and you see a lot of innovation going on, and we need to move fast. We need to move faster. That's what it is. And accelerate. >> And that's what you're all about, acceleration, so, Intel's making a lot of announcements, really, about acceleration at FPGA. For acceleration and in data centers and in big data, and all these big applications. So, explain just a little bit how that seed is evolving and what some of the recent announcements are all about. >> The world of computing must accelerate. I think we all agree on that. We all see that that's a key requirement. And FPGA's are a truly versatile, multi-function accelerator. It accelerates so many workloads in the high-performance computing space, may it be financial, genomics, oil and gas, data analytics, and the list goes on. Machine learning is a very big one. The list goes on and on. And, so, we're investing heavily in providing solutions which makes it much easier for our users to develop and deploy FPGA in a high-performance computing environment. >> You guys are taking a lot of steps to make the software programming at FPGA a lot easier, so you don't have to be a hardcore hardware engineer, so you can open it up to a broader ecosystem and get a broader solution set. Is that right? >> That's right, and it's not just the hardware. How do you unlock the benefits of FPGA as a versatile accelerator, so their parallelism, their ability to do real-time, low-latency, acceleration of many different workloads, and how do you enable that in an environment which is truly dynamic and multi-function, like a data center. And so, the product we've recently announced is the acceleration stack for xeon with FPGA, which enables that use more. >> So, what are the components for that stack? >> It starts with hardware. So, we are building a hardware accelerator card, it's a pc express plugin card, it's called programmable accelerator card. We have integrated solutions where you have everything on an FPGA in package, but what's common is a software framework solution stack, which sits on top of these different hardware implementation, which really makes it easy for a developer to develop an accelerator, for a user to then deploy that accelerator and run it in their environment, and it also enables a data center operator to basically enable the FPGA like any other computer resources by integrating it into their orchestration framework. So, multiple levels taking care of all those needs. >> It's interesting, because there's a lot of big trends that you guys are taking advantage of. Obviously, we're at Super Computing, but big data, streaming analytics, is all the rage now, so more data faster, reading it in real time, pumping it into the database in real time, and then, right around the corner, we have IoT and internet of things and all these connected devices. So the demand for increased speed, to get that data in, get that data processed, get the analytics back out, is only growing exponentially. >> That's right, and FPGAs, due to their flexibility, have distinct advantages there. The traditional model is look aside of offload, where you have a processor, and then you offload your tasks to your accelerator. The FPGA, with their flexible I/Os and flexible core can actually run directly in the data path, so that's what we call in-line processing. And what that allows people to do is, whatever the source is, may it be cameras, may it be storage, may it be through the network, through ethernet, can stream directly into the FPGA and do your acceleration as the data comes in in a streaming way. And FPGAs provide really unique advantages there versus other types of accelerators. Low-latency, very high band-width, and they're flexible in a sense that our customers can build different interfaces, different connectivity around those FPGAs. So, it's really amazing how versatile the usage of FPGA has become. >> It is pretty interesting, because you're using all the benefits that come from hardware, hardware-based solutions, which you just get a lot of benefits when things are hardwired, with the software component and enabling a broader ecosystem to write ready-made solutions and integrations to their existing solutions that they already have. Great approach. >> The acceleration stack provides a consistent interface to the developer and the user of the FPGA. What that allows our ecosystem and our customers to do is to define these accelerators based on this framework, and then they can easily migrate those between different hardware platforms, so we're building in future improvements of the solution, and the consistent interfaces then allow our customers and partners to build their software stacks on top of it. So, their investment, once they do it and we target our Arria 10 programmable accelerator card can easily be leveraged and moved forward into the next generation strategy, and beyond. We enable, really, and encourage a broad ecosystem, to build solutions. You'll see that here at the show, many partners now have demos, and they show their solutions built on Intel FPGA hardware and the acceleration stack. >> OK, so I'm going to put you on the spot. So, these are announced, what's the current state of the general availability? >> We're sampling now on the cards, the acceleration stack is available for delivery to customers. A lot of it is open source, by the way, so it can already be downloaded from GitHub And the partners are developing the solutions they are demonstrating today. The product will go into volume production in the first half of next year. So, we're very close. >> All right, very good. Well, Bernard, thanks for taking a few minutes to stop by. >> Oh, it's my pleasure. >> All right. He's Bernard, I'm Jeff. You're watching theCUBE from Super Computing 17. Thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Nov 14 2017

SUMMARY :

brought to you by Intel. I'll get that good by the end of the day, I'm glad to be here. So, have you been to this conference before? Yeah, a couple of times before. Yeah, and it's different, too, and you see a lot of innovation going on, For acceleration and in data centers and the list goes on. and get a broader solution set. and how do you enable that in an environment and run it in their environment, and all these connected devices. and FPGAs, due to their flexibility, and enabling a broader ecosystem and the consistent interfaces then OK, so I'm going to put you on the spot. A lot of it is open source, by the way, Well, Bernard, thanks for taking a few minutes to stop by. Thanks for watching.

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