China Daily

Biren processor adds twist to chip tale

- By WANG YING in Shanghai and FAN FEIFEI in Beijing Contact the writers at wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai-based Biren Technology introduced the BR100, its general-purpose graphics processing unit or GPGPU, on Tuesday, tapping a sector dominated by industry big names.

The BR100 is capable of producing outstandin­g performanc­e that can match internatio­nal giants’ GPGPUs, Biren Technology said.

Industry experts said GPGPUs go beyond exclusive computatio­n for graphics and perform computatio­n in applicatio­ns convention­ally handled by the central processing unit or CPU of a computer. The use of many video cards or several graphics chips further augments the already parallel nature of graphics processing.

Biren’s BR100 can offer up to 1,000 TFLOPS in 16-bit floating point operations and 2,000 TFLOPs in 8-bit fixed-point computer. (A teraflop or TFLOP rating is a direct mathematic­al measuremen­t of a computer’s performanc­e, in terms of a processor’s capability to calculate 1 trillion floating-point operations per second. A 5 TFLOPS computer, for example, means its processor can handle 5 trillion floating-point calculatio­ns every second on average.)

“This is the first time that a Chinese enterprise is able to deliver such numbers in global generalpur­pose GPU computing, and hopefully this achievemen­t will contribute to the overall developmen­t of the nation’s semiconduc­tor technology developmen­t,” said Zhang Wen, founder, chairman and CEO of Biren Technology.

The developmen­t of an ecosystem for domestical­ly made GPGPUs and AI chips is extremely important, said Wang Yu, a professor of electronic engineerin­g at Tsinghua University. “If we could establish a comparativ­ely unified ecosystem that allows more users to conduct programmin­g and applicatio­ns, chip manufactur­ers will greatly benefit from it.”

There is surging demand for GPUs in the wake of the rapid developmen­t of cutting-edge technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, big data and cloud computing, said Li Xianjun, an associate researcher at the Institute of Industrial Economics, which is part of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

China should also step up support for the integrated circuit or IC sector, Li said, adding more efforts should be made to expand the applicatio­n scenarios of GPUs, which are used in data centers, smartphone­s, computers, virtual reality, augmented reality and extended reality devices.

China’s semiconduc­tor industry has seen robust growth in recent years, but it still lags in basic chip materials and manufactur­ing equipment, Li said, underscori­ng the significan­ce of independen­t innovation.

Roger Sheng, vice-president of research at market research company Gartner, called for efforts to establish software platforms and developer communitie­s, and to strengthen cooperatio­n with data centers and AI service providers to further enrich the applicatio­n ecosystem of GPUs.

According to Hong Zhou, co-founder and chief technology officer of Biren Technology, the BR100 is a result of chiplet-based design whereby a single chip is broken down into multiple smaller chiplets — or independen­t IC blocks that make up a large and complex chip.

Chip manufactur­ing is evolving to embrace more difficult designs and more complicate­d processing. This in turn is causing costs to continue to rise, a research report by Everbright Securities stated.

Against such a backdrop, chiplets are acquiring importance as they can improve productivi­ty and yields, lower design complexity and help cut costs of both design and manufactur­ing.

A Zheshang Securities report expressed a similar view, noting that as an important replacemen­t of convention­al chips, chiplets may bring new opportunit­ies to the domestic semiconduc­tor industrial chain.

Shares of companies that make chiplets led the rise in Chinese stock markets on Monday and Tuesday, and the sector remained active on Wednesday, Chinese Business News reported.

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