Intel Drops Teaser For Upcoming Xe-HPG GPU Architecture
by Ryan Smith on March 18, 2021 5:00 PM ESTWith the launch of their first-iteration Xe-LP architecture now firmly in the proverbial rearview mirror, Intel’s GPU division has turned its sights towards its next consumer-focused GPU architecture, Xe-HPG. Today the company has posted a very light teaser video advertising the forthcoming architecture.
Xe HPG microarchitecture teaser = 🍬👀 pic.twitter.com/kdzBokBiW4
— Intel Graphics (@IntelGraphics) March 18, 2021
The brief, 30 second promotional video highlights how Xe-HPG is built on top of Intel’s current Xe-LP architecture. And while there aren’t any concrete technical details disclosed within the otherwise abstract video, it’s notable that the video does briefly show 5 layers of blocks on the Xe-HPG chip. Assuming for the moment that Intel isn’t being quite literal here – a 5 layer GPU would be extravagant and hard to cool, to say the least – it’s more likely an allusion to the number of Execution Units (EUs) or some other aspect of the architecture.
Finally, the video also includes a short block of binary text as a further game for the audience to play.
10100000
11101101
11010000
For the moment we don’t have a solid idea of what it means. But no doubt someone will figure it out before too long.
Otherwise, this will no doubt be the first of many teasers for Xe-HPG. While Intel hasn’t provided a more recent roadmap for chips based on the architecture, the company previously announced in 2020 that they were aiming for a 2021 launch. And with the first DG2 chip already in the labs as of October, we know that Intel is well underway in bringing up Xe-HPG silicon.
Update (03/19): Sharp-eyed sleuths have since solved the binary code mystery. As it turns out, the digits are for an IPv4 address, which leads to https://xehpg.intel.com/. According to Intel's page, a scavenger hunt is starting on the 26th, so it looks like Intel will have some additional games for audiences to play.
Source: Intel
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Machinus - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link
035160
237
208
tpurves - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link
whelp those numbers could be IP and yep... 35.160.237.208 works as an ip address that redirects you to https://xehpg.intel.com/Hulk - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link
Good for you!mode_13h - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link
Oh darn. I was all ready for it to spell something in hex. And, since it's Intel, you'd probably have to swap the order (because little endian, of course).ballsystemlord - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link
;)deil - Friday, March 19, 2021 - link
There are fields in code of that suggesting they will register people for something."email","first-name","last-name","password","userid"
I guess they want people to google them a lot of times, to get stats higher for launch.....
shabby - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link
Won't this be oem only? Seems kinda pointless to hype it up.SarahKerrigan - Friday, March 19, 2021 - link
Where did you get that idea? This isn't DG1. This is a mainstream dGPU product.shabby - Friday, March 19, 2021 - link
Ah that's what I was thinking of 👍CiccioB - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link
It's an IP address: 35:160:237:208Try it, it will bring you to the Xe HPG Intel page!
Have I won something?