One of the main problems we find in normal computing is that adding more cores or threads to our team does not translate into linear scaling in performanceto the point that some tasks may not show any improvement in performance, or in the worst case, a lowering of the same depending on the architecture of the processor or the system.
However, as we read in TechPowerUpit seems that a company called Morumi is developing a processor that would take this maxim ahead to offer infinite scalability in parallelwhich means that, in this case, the more cores, the more performance.
This would also be linear, which is why the scalability would be infinite, since there would not be a theoretical maximum limit in which performance did not double when adding twice as many cores thanks to a new architecture that distributes the data to the processor cores before being processed through a network mesh within the processor itself.
Obviously, this requires software specially compiled for this chip, but this is typical at software optimization level for each new hardware that appears on the market.
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Jordi Bercial
Avid technology and electronics enthusiast. I tinkered with computer components almost since I could walk. I started working at Geeknetic after winning a contest on their forum for writing hardware articles. Drift, mechanics and photography lover. Do not hesitate and leave a comment on my articles if you have any questions.