Aside from Arm CEO delivering his own speech about the golden age of computing, they have shared other interesting topics with one being what is Arm’s move going 2023 and beyond.
Delivered by Senior Vice President and General Manager, Infrastructure Line of Business, Mr. Mohamed Awad, he touched on some of the key aspects when it comes to modern-day computing infrastructure being under sustained pressure with about 14.75 Billion IoT connections, over 1 Billion 5G subscribers and the world generating over 120 Zettabytes of data by the time 2023 ends.
Constraints are also worrying since they are agreeing on the eventual death of Moore’s Law by 2050 (And even earlier by NVIDIA’s standard) in addition to a challenging geo-political environment. Thus, the need for specialized processing has increased tremendously over time despite the cost of producing modern chips keeps racking up over the years.
To combat all of these, Arm has decided to introduce the Neoverse platform.
First, it aims to maximize performance efficiency for both scale-up (single thread performance) and scale-out (multi-thread throughput) jobs via Neoverse V and N series cores that come with superior interconnectivity that makes the cores incredibly easy to scale.
They also want to shorten the gap between completing the CPU compute system and the deployment process of deliverables with the help of integrated platforms so that clients can innovate as early as possible.
They also talked about how Arm Neoverse partners have been the forefront players in delivering cutting-edge technologies in fields of Hyperscale, Data Centers, HPC, DPU, 5G wireless, and more. Examples given are NVIDIA’s Grace Hopper super chip alongside the GPU giant’s collaboration with Softbank paving new possibilities in cloud RAN and AI co-hosting. On the other hand, organizations like Intel and AWS are putting out things with great performance and energy efficiency in the DPU section.
And of course, strong partnerships across each layer of the computing value chain with parties like foundries and OEMs to software ISVs and hyperscalars, all of these are just as important to Arm as industry partners are the key to allowing Arm to define the future of computing in multiple markets.