Altera unveils tenth generation programmable logic families
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Altera has announced two new product families, which the company says are the 10th generation of its fpga technology. Stratix 10 will be manufactured on Intel's 14nm Tri-Gate process, while Arria 10 products will be made by TSMC on a 20nm process.
Samples of Arria 10 devices will be available 'early in 2014', while Altera is following its normal introduction process for the Stratix 10 range and expects test chips 'this year'. Stratix 10 parts may feature up to 4million logic elements (LEs). Both families will be available in fpga and SoC variants, with the SoC devices featuring hard processor subsystems.
Stratix 10 devices will be the most powerful Altera has introduced. According to Danny Biran, senior vice president of corporate strategy, the parts will feature a new architecture, but no details are being released as yet. However, he claimed users could expect a significant performance boost. "If you look at the last few years, the semiconductor industry has been facing a challenge. As we move from one process node to the next, we get an improvement in density, but not much improvement in performance and power. But, with our next generation, we can break away from this, maybe doubling current performance."
Biran said developers will be able to trade off power and performance during the design process. "At one end, designers will get performance at any cost – maybe double – but will increase power consumption by 30%. Still, that's better than anything we've seen for years. In the middle, there's a balance point, bringing 40 to 60% more performance for the same power consumption as today while at the other end, current levels of performance can be had for 30% of today's power consumption." Biran would not give details of the Stratix 10 SoC's processor subsystem.
Meanwhile, Arria 10 represents the new mid range offering, even though it will outperform today's Stratix V parts. Biran said users could expect a 15% performance increase over Stratix V, while consuming 40% less power than Arria V devices. "Whatever you can do today with high end parts, you'll be able to do with mid range devices at lower power consumption."
Arria 10 SoCs will have a dual Cortex-A9 hard processor subsystem running at 1.5GHz, along with 16 transceivers supporting 28Gbit/s chip to chip data rates. "These parts will have more than 1m LEs," Biran added, "and we already have more than 1000 customers working on Arria 10 based designs." Other features include interfaces to DDR4 memory and to the Hybrid Memory Cube, and three Ethernet MACs supporting 1Gbit links.