Home › News › Industry News
AMD introduces performance-boosting specification
In a press release issued today, AMD announced the introduction of a new software specification they call "Light-Weight Profiling". LWP is a new specification that supposedly will allow increases in software performance by allowing them to be smarter about what hardware extensions to use when processing.
The LWP spec is geared as a tool for developers to help them create multi-threaded software easier, similar to moves taken by Intel this year as multi-core processors enter the mainstream. While even the press release is a bit muddling, the spec seems to just help code be written for newer hardware:
LWP is designed to enable code to make dynamic and real-time decisions about how best to improve the performance of concurrently running tasks, using techniques such as memory organization and code layout, with very little overhead. These capabilities are particularly beneficial to runtime environments like Java and .NET, which can run multiple threads and are used to develop an increasingly large percentage of applications.
You can read the full press release at AMD's site. They cite benefits to many types of software and development frameworks, such as .NET and JVM. Obviously they have a lot of incentive to help developers write programs that take advantage of their newer CPUs.
The LWP spec is geared as a tool for developers to help them create multi-threaded software easier, similar to moves taken by Intel this year as multi-core processors enter the mainstream. While even the press release is a bit muddling, the spec seems to just help code be written for newer hardware:
LWP is designed to enable code to make dynamic and real-time decisions about how best to improve the performance of concurrently running tasks, using techniques such as memory organization and code layout, with very little overhead. These capabilities are particularly beneficial to runtime environments like Java and .NET, which can run multiple threads and are used to develop an increasingly large percentage of applications.
You can read the full press release at AMD's site. They cite benefits to many types of software and development frameworks, such as .NET and JVM. Obviously they have a lot of incentive to help developers write programs that take advantage of their newer CPUs.
Related Stories
Most Popular
| Trending | Featured |
-
iOS 5.1.1 untethered jailbreak tool released, supports 4S, iPad 3
-
After five days, Facebook ranks as worst IPO flop of the decade
-
Rumor: Windows 8 RC will launch June 1, will ship with Adobe Flash
-
Rumor: AMD "Piledriver" FX CPU production to begin Q3 2012
-
Diablo III becomes the fastest-selling PC game in history
Editors' Tablet Picks
Subscribe to TechSpot
Get free exclusive content, learn about new features and tech breaking news.