Developers have created a stable laboratory Intel microprocessor, which provides 41% greater throughput when using the same amount of energy which are necessary for comparable conventional cores.

Kate Bowman (Keith Bowman), Research Laboratory of Intel Circuit Research, said that if this technology will be used in commercialprocessors Intel, then the stable and adaptive design will provide greater bandwidth than the guaranteed modern processors. In processors with lower productivity will be more attractive characteristics. In less than ideal conditions, the new design will optimize the performance and capacity, to ensure more effective than working processors that are based on conventional architecture.

New technology is actually a form of self-tuning with the built-in error detection and correction. True, it eats up cycles, but not as much as it would be eaten up by using the standard method, which is based on the buffers, spending cycles, so-called shelter belts. The end result is a more effective treatment.Prototype of the new Intel processor includes adaptive schemes that remove the protective strip. Instead, the new schemes detect errors caused by voltage, temperature and aging factor, and fix them on the fly, without requiring the use of backup cycles. This leads either to maximize throughput or to minimize energy requirements, which in any case, ahead of the performance of conventional processors, said Bowman.