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Volume 4, Number 11 -- March 29, 2007

IBM to Detail Superfast Optical Chipset

Published: March 29, 2007

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The future of computing is, for many reasons, probably going to be optical because of the blazing speed and high bandwidth of optical circuits compared to electronic components. The U.S. Defense Department, which helped fund some advanced research by IBM certainly believes so, and both are pleased about a prototype optical chipset that Big Blue will detail at the 2007 Optical Fiber Conference in Anaheim, California, later this week.

Getting electronic signals off of chips and into networks requires a lot of energy, and it takes considerably more energy to move electrons, the basic unit of electricity, than it does to move photons, the unit of energy that makes up light. This is why telephone companies a long time ago moved to fiber optic cables and some day, if we are all lucky, we'll have fiber optic links coming right into our homes, giving us a huge increase in bandwidth.

The advances that researchers from IBM's T.J. Watson Research Center will detail later this week will allow fiber optic networks to link more smoothly into electronic components like processors and digital signal processors. The innovation with the prototype optical chipset that IBM is showing off comes from creating an optical transceiver (with both signal driver and receiver circuits) using the current CMOS technologies that IBM uses to make its Power and PowerPC chips. To this, IBM adds other optical components using indium phosphide and gallium arsenide circuits, which are more efficient than silicon circuits but which are more expensive to produce given the exotic nature of the materials.

The whole chipset measures only 3.25 by 5.25 millimeters, and it can deliver an astounding 160 Gigabits per second. That's eight times the bandwidth of experimental optical chipsets created by IBM.

To put that into a human perspective, IBM says that this increase in bandwidth is enough to allow a high definition, feature-length file to download in a second instead of the 30 minutes it can take today on what are characterized as high-speed networks.

IBM says that the compactness of the chipset design, the number of communication channels (in this case, 16), and the bandwidth in each channel is the highest that anyone has ever shown with optical circuits to date.

IBM does not expect commercial applications of the optical chipset much before 2010, but has hinted that it could be used in its servers as well as in switches and routers.



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Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Sun Breaks Sparc Unit Free Again

Gartner Says It Was "All Over" the Virtualization Effect

Oracle Sues SAP Over 'Corporate Theft on a Grand Scale'

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But Wait, There's More:


Rackable Builds Data Centers in Shipping Containers, Too . . . Sun Offers First Opteron-Based Netra Server . . . IBM to Detail Superfast Optical Chipset . . . Oracle Buys Tangosol for Data Caching . . . Software Powerhouses Agree on SOA Standards Bodies . . . Fortran Creator, John Backus, Dies at 82 . . .

The Unix Guardian

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