Rapport Kilocore | |
KC256 | |
Developer | Rapport |
Type | Microprocessors |
Introduction | 2005 (announced) January, 2006 (launch) |
Architecture | many-core 8-bit microprocessor |
µarch | Kilocore |
Word size | 8 bit 1 octets
2 nibbles |
Process | 180 nm 0.18 μm
1.8e-4 mm |
Package | TQFP-144 |
Kilocore was a family of many-core 8-bit microprocessors designed by Rapport introduced in 2006 that implemented their "KiloCore Architecture Computing Fabric", a scalable many-core architecture.
Architecture
Kilocore architecture is based on leased technology from the PipeRench Project from Carnegie Mellon.
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Members
The first model of the Kilocore family was the KC256 which made a debut at the 2006 CES. This model incorporated 256 cores in a grid of 16 strips of 16 cores each. In 2006 IBM announced a joint collaboration with Rapport to produce 2 additional models: KC1024 and KC1025. The 1024 model was supposed to be roughly the design of KC256 times 4. The 1025 model is the same as the 1024 model with an additional IBM Power PC CPU core incorporated as well for general-purpose tasks. These two models appear to have never made it to market before Rapport was dissolved in 2009.
Model | Introduction | Cores | Word Size | Description |
KC256 | 2006 | 256 | 8 bit | 256 homogeneous cores |
KC1024 | Planned for 2008 | 1024 | 8 bit | 1024 homogeneous cores |
KC1025 | Planned for 2008 | 1024+1 | 8 bit | 1024 homogeneous cores + IBM PowerPC coprocessor |
Documents
designer | Rapport + and IBM + |
first announced | 2005 + |
first launched | January 2006 + |
full page name | rapport/kilocore + |
instance of | microprocessor family + |
main designer | Rapport + |
microarchitecture | Kilocore + |
name | Rapport Kilocore + |
package | TQFP-144 + |
process | 180 nm (0.18 μm, 1.8e-4 mm) + |
word size | 8 bit (1 octets, 2 nibbles) + |