From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "2018"
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* February 11-15: [[ISSCC]] 2018 | * February 11-15: [[ISSCC]] 2018 | ||
* February 12: [[AMD]] launched {{amd|Ryzen}} desktop APUs based on {{amd|Zen|l=arch}} and {{amd|Vega|l=arch}} | * February 12: [[AMD]] launched {{amd|Ryzen}} desktop APUs based on {{amd|Zen|l=arch}} and {{amd|Vega|l=arch}} | ||
+ | * February 13: [[ARM Holdings|ARM]] announces two new [[neural processors]] IPs - the {{armh|ML processor}} for inference processing and the {{armh|OD processor}} for real-time object detection. |
Revision as of 11:54, 22 February 2018
2018 | |
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Unix Time | 1514764800 - 1546300799 |
Years | |
In 2018:
- January 3: A new series of side-channel attacks were disclosed which had industry-wide implications (Meltdown and Spectre).
- January 3: Samsung announces their next flagship microprocessor, the Exynos 9810
- January 7-12: CES 2018
- January 7: Intel launches 8th Gen Intel Core with Radeon RX Vega M, formerly Kaby Lake G.
- January 8: NVIDIA launches the Drive Xavier autonomous car SoC.
- January 10: SPEC CPU2006 has been retired.
- January 24: Imagination Technologies launches the PowerVR Series8XT GT8540, a new high-performance GPU based on Furian.
- February 5: Ampere Computing announces their first ARM processor, the A1.
- February 7: Intel launches Xeon D processors based on the Skylake microarchitecture (formerly Skylake DE)
- February 11-15: ISSCC 2018
- February 12: AMD launched Ryzen desktop APUs based on Zen and Vega
- February 13: ARM announces two new neural processors IPs - the ML processor for inference processing and the OD processor for real-time object detection.