Seminario Antonio González (UPC): Energy-Efficient Architectures for Mobile GPUs in the post-Moore Era

Dentro de los seminarios de investigación del MURGCV, el próximo viernes 9 de mayo a las 12 horas en el aula A0.07 del Ed. Ada Byron nos visitará Antonio González (UPC).

 

Abstract: Mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets have become the most commonly used computing device nowadays, and projections forecast a significant growth in the future in both the number of shipped units and their capabilities. These devices have become quite powerful and most applications that run on them make an intensive use of graphics animation to provide a rich user experience. Energy consumption and the related heat dissipation issues are the main constraints for the capabilities provided by such systems. These systems are equipped with a very small battery that is expected to last for hours if not days, and since they are normally handheld, their external temperature cannot significantly exceed typical human levels. To provide richer user experiences in these devices, dramatic improvements in energy efficiency are required. This talk focuses on one of the main components of these systems, which is the GPU, and describes some novel microarchitectures that we have recently developed for increasing its performance and energy efficiency.

 

Bio: Antonio Gonzalez received his Ph.D. degree from the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), in Barcelona, Spain, in 1989. He was the founding director of the Intel Barcelona Research Center from 2002 to 2014. His research has focused on computer architecture, compilers and parallel processing, with a special emphasis on processor microarchitecture and code generation. He has published over 400 papers, has given over 130 invited talks, holds 53 patents, has advised 40 PhD theses in these areas. Antonio is the recipient of an ERC Advanced Grant. He has a long track record of innovations through technology transfers of his research results to commercial products, especially microprocessors and computing systems in general.