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HardwareSoftware

Microsoft, niente dati stranieri per il governo USA

Microsoft ha messo in cascina un’importante vittoria. Una corte d’appello federale degli Stati Uniti ha dato ragione alla società guidata da Satya Nadella stabilendo che Microsoft non è tenuta a fornire al Dipartimento di Giustizia (DOJ) e agli altri enti alcun dato memorizzato su server stranieri.

In prima istanza, Microsoft era stata obbligata a fornire dati memorizzati fuori dai confini USA. La società di Redmond si era appellata alla decisione in primo grado e aveva avviato, in sede legale, una strenua opposizione nei confronti del governo statunitense. La vertenza, che si trascinava da anni, si conclude adesso con un risultato estremamente positivo per Microsoft e per i suoi clienti.

Microsoft, niente dati stranieri per il governo USA

I giudici federali hanno infatti stabilito che le norme USA non possono essere estese ai dati conservati su server fisicamente situati all’estero, fuori dai confini nazionali.

Microsoft, che nel corso del tempo aveva potuto contare anche sull’appoggio pervenuto da altri “big” del settore, non dovrà consegnare alcun dato relativo a clienti che hanno scelto di gestire le loro informazioni servendosi di server stranieri.

Il Dipartimento di Giustizia ha criticato la scelta operata dal tribunale federale parlando anche di problematiche di sicurezza. C’è da dire, però, che la giurisdizione di uno stato non può evidentemente estendersi all’infuori dei suoi confini e che semmai gli enti investigativi e le forze di polizia possono chiedere la collaborazione degli stati in cui è situato il server.

Si pensi alla piattaforma Azure: Microsoft ha fatto della sicurezza e della riservatezza dei dati degli utenti un suo cavallo di battaglia (vedere l’articolo Azure: la sicurezza delle applicazioni e dei dati).
Il comportamento tenuto nei confronti del DOJ va proprio in questa direzione: gli utenti devono essere sempre proprietari esclusivi dei loro dati ed eventuali ispezioni sugli stessi (ove tecnicamente possibili; a meno che non siano state attivate funzionalità crittografiche) non possono mai prescindere dalla tempestiva informazione del cliente.

Autore: IlSoftware.it

Categorie
HardwareSoftware

Airbus utilizza un drone con fotocamera Sony A7R per ispezionare i suoi aerei

Siamo abituati a pensare il peggio quando leggiamo le parole ‘drone’ e ‘aereo’ nella stessa frase: ma questo non è il caso di questa notizia che vede al centro il colosso aerospaziale Airbus e un drone utilizzato per l’ispezione finale di routine della parte superiore degli aeromobili. Prima dell’entrata in servizio del drone, un AscTec Falcon 8 prodotto da Ascending Technologies equipaggiato con una fotocamera Sony Alpha A7R con ottica Sonnar T* FE 35mm f/2.8 ZA, l’ispezione veniva portata a termine da tecnici che si muovevano al di sopra dell’aereo con una piattaforma mobile. Questa fase dell’ispezione è mirata a ricerca non conformità, graffi o difetti estetici, come differenze di densità nella verniciatura. Il tempo richiesto dai tecnici sulla piattaforma aerea era di circa 2 ore, mentre con il drone sono sufficienti 10/15 minuti. Altri vantaggi sono il confort, ma soprattutto la sicurezza degli addetti, che possono operare coi piedi per terra e non sospesi a diversi metri da essa.

Il drone riprende fino a 150 immagini dell’aereo: da esse viene creato un modello digitale in tre dimensioni dell’aeromobile, navigabile comodamente (anche al chiuso) dai tecnici su un ampio pannello dotato di touchscreen. I risultati della prima sperimentazione sono stati molto buoni: la fase di test è avvenuta nei controlli degli ultimi nati della flotta airbus commerciale, gli aerei della famiglia A350. A partire dal 2017 questo tipo di controllo diverrà routine anche per il resto della gamma dei velivoli del costruttore europeo.

Autore: Le news di Hardware Upgrade

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HardwareSoftware

SiFive Unveils Freedom Platforms for RISC-V-Based Semi-Custom Chips

SiFive, a company established by researchers who invented the RISC-V instruction set architecture in the University of California Berkeley several years ago, has this week announced two platforms which could be used to design semi-custom SoCs based on RISC-V cores. SiFive is the world’s first and yet the only company developing chips featuring the RISC-V ISA and it already has initial customers interested in designing SoCs for machine learning, storage, embedded, IoT and wearable applications.

SiFive: World’s First Developer of Commercial RISC-V Chips

RISC-V is an open-source microprocessor architecture developed by researchers in the Computer Science Division at UC Berkeley and officially introduced in 2010. It has since been evolved by various both academic researchers and volunteers. The CPU ISA was designed for various applications including mobile and embedded devices, and is available free under a BSD license. Those who adopt RISC-V can develop either open and free cores, or closed and proprietary cores, which is good for developing commercial projects that do not want to share secrets with rivals.

A number of companies (including huge ones like Google, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Oracle) recently joined the RISC-V Foundation, but barely any organization has unveiled an actual RISC-V-based commercial chip (what they have internally is anyone’s guess). Basically, as far as we know, the technology has never left various research labs. As a result the original team that worked on the technology at UC Berkeley founded SiFive, which is going to develop commercial semi-custom SoCs for various applications featuring RISC-V cores as well as third-party IP.

New Semi-Custom Chip Business Model

Chips are used for a lot of applications and in the coming years the need for custom SoCs will only grow as customers demand specialized hardware for their problem sets. However, development of modern SoCs is not a very affordable task from a financial standpoint. To build a simple chip, one needs to license the general-purpose compute cores (or ISA itself) from companies like ARM or Imagination Technologies, but to also get a variety of supporting IP (e.g., memory controllers, I/O interfaces, etc.) either from developers like Rambus, or build everything from scratch. Licensing typically requires companies to pay an upfront fee for a set of rights, and an SDK, and then royalties for every ASIC (application specific integrated circuit) containing the IP that they sell. In other words, a company building a chip needs to make a hefty investment to begin, and then the licensing fees will affect the pricing of every unit sold. Moreover, to create a chip, one needs a semiconductor development team to specify requirements, design the IC (integrated circuit), tape it out, analyze defects and implement fixes (if needed). Hiring a dedicated development team for just one chip is expensive and complicated. As a result, many newcomers need either to join bigger players (who have appropriate teams inhouse), or concentrate on software and utilize off-the-shelf silicon to build modern devices. SiFive plans to design semi-custom chips for the latter companies using RISC-V cores as well as its common Freedom platforms and technologies. Use of RISC-V cores (as well as common components designed by SiFive) is being touted to help to significantly lower development costs.

The company promises that its approach will enable players without significant financial and technological backing to get their own custom SoCs with their own special-purpose IP. SiFive claims that it will be able not only to integrate third-party IP into chips, but also add custom features, such as RISC-V extensions, accelerators, or co-processors. Moreover, the chip designer can also help its partners to integrate their unique intellectual property. In fact, SiFive can manage the entire process of chip development and manufacturing and then supply its clients the final manufactured chip for commercial applications.

From many points of view, SiFive’s business model resembles that of AMD’s EESC (enterprise, embedded and semi-custom) division, which develops SoCs for companies like Microsoft and Sony. The important difference between SiFive and other developers of semi-custom chips is that SiFive publishes all the low-level specs of its Freedom Unleashed and Freedom Everywhere platforms necessary for software development (e.g., memory maps, debug interfaces, interrupt control, etc.), whereas RISC-V Foundation provides basic development tools to make it considerably easier for programmers to design software for chips based on the microarchitecture. In fact, the software side of the story here is no less important than the hardware part. The use of the BSD license for a lot of this further lowers the investments required to deliver a solution involving a custom silicon and supporting software. For example, SiFive tells us that there is a lot of standard software (e.g., FreeBSE, FreeRTOS, etc) that already works on the Freedom platforms (on RISC-V-based platforms, to be more precise), so its customers only need to focus on their particular area of chip and software differentiation. However, it has been noted that customer specific extensions to the RISC-V ISA could certainly break some level of software compatibility, depending what is used and how.

“This expands on the tremendous amount of momentum in the RISC-V ecosystem,” said Jack Kang, VP of product and business development at SiFive. “Besides the ports and software targeted for the RISC-V ISA, these platforms will enable OS and other low-level software to be targeted to a standard platform specification.”

Two Platforms

Initially, SiFive will offer its clients two base platforms for different applications: the Freedom Unleashed (U500) for performance-demanding applications as well as the Freedom Everywhere (E300) for low-power devices. Both platforms have been verified with TSMC and can allow SiFive to quickly add customizations, which is what their customers require and which greatly speeds up time-to-market, simply because the bigger parts of Freedom-based ASICs have already been developed.

The SiFive Freedom U500 platform will feature up to eight 64-bit cache-coherent Unix-capable RISC-V cores. Each SoC based on the U500 features four DDR3/DDR4 DRAM channels with ECC support, PCIe 3.0, USB 3.0 (with OTG support), Gigabit Ethernet, power management, a variety of peripheral interfaces (e.g., SD/eMMC, GPIO, UART, I2C, etc.) and so on. SiFive can add various extensions to the general-purpose cores to meet demands of clients, add custom input/output interfaces, custom co-processors/accelerators and other IP. The chip designer verified its Freedom U500 platform with TSMC’s 28nm process technology and thus can quickly incorporate additional blocks, tape out the product and manufacture it using a proven process technology. SiFive tells us that several companies designing solutions for machine learning, storage, and networking have already expressed interest in using the U500 platform directly with SiFive.

The SiFive Freedom E300 platform is intended for less demanding applications, which is why it is powered by a 32-bit single-issue in-order general purpose RISC-V core, which can be customized or enhanced to meet specific needs. The design supports on-chip memory and can support various interface technologies, including SD/eMMC, USB 1.1, GPIO, UART, I2C and so on. The Freedom E300 is optimized for TSMC’s 180 nm fabrication process, which is 15 years old and which is still used for many chips that are not complex and do not run at high frequencies. According to the chip developer, customers working on embedded microcontrollers, IoT, and wearables have demonstrated some interest in the E300 platform.

Default die sizes and cost have not been explicitly mentioned by SiFive at this time – it will be up to the customer IP and financial arrangements on a per-customer basis.

New Horizons

The management of SiFive stresses that the two platforms, which the company announced this month, are only the beginning for SiFive and more will be incoming. At a high level, this should broaden the number of markets that SiFive can address. Those future platforms will use different process technologies depending on requirements of appropriate applications. Keeping in mind the key promise of SiFive: low-cost development of custom SoCs. 

SiFive does not elaborate how much money its customers will be able to save due to the free RISC-V microarchitecture, any pre-developed platforms (with re-used components), proven silicon, open-source software or other advantages that the company has to offer. This is understandable because every customer product could be unique in complexity and customization. However, SiFive says that in certain cases it will be able to deliver products to startups that do not have any silicon teams at all, which essentially means that the developer plans to address needs of very small players. Typically, such companies cannot get access to custom silicon because of high costs and other difficulties, but SiFive implies that with their pre-developed Freedom platforms the startups may get their chance to build semi-custom chips and take advantage of things like higher performance and/or lower power consumption compared to off-the-shelf not-customized silicon or FPGAs. The VP of SiFive told us that he could see a future where a couple of engineers in a garage can get access to a custom SoC “with a moderate Kickstarter campaign.”

SiFive claims that it is a fabless semiconductor company which specializes in the development of various chips based on RISC-V-compatible cores. While semi-custom RISC-V SoCs may not be the most lucrative market segment, SiFive is the only player here and the company will clearly try to capitalize on its unique position. SiFive’s decision to use the RISC-V ISA is natural given the background of its founders, as well as the company’s business model (RISC-V is free). However, background and costs are not the only reason here. The interest towards the microarchitecture is growing – in recent months, companies like AMD, Google, IBM, NVIDIA, Microsoft, Qualcomm and Western Digital joined RISC-V Foundation, which manages the development of the technology.

Given the nature of semi-custom chip business, SiFive cannot disclose the names of companies interested in its platforms and since this is a private company, it does not need to confirm whether it is developing any commercial chips at all. However, given the interest for RISC-V from the aforementioned industry heavyweights, it looks like SiFive is a company to watch, not only because it could build interesting semi-custom SoCs, but because it could actually develop the industry’s first commercial chips based on open-source RISC-V microarchitecture.

Autore: AnandTech

Categorie
HardwareSoftware

ARM is turning Japanese


£24 billion, I really think so

The British chipmaker, ARM has which has just agreed to be acquired by the Japanese giant SoftBank for £24 billion.

ARM chips are under the bonnet of nearly every major iPhone brand and been instrumental in the mobile revolution.

Last year, 15 billion ARM-designed chips were shipped and installed in devices, and the company’s revenues grew 22 per cent  to £968 million. Its fat profit margins mean a lot of that is translated into profits, which were up 31 per cent to £415m.

The outfit was spun out of the British computer company Acorn in 1990 after developing processors for the BBC Micro. Before SoftBank’s offer it was valued at £17 billion and was the biggest tech outfit in the UK.
SoftBank will keep ARM’s headquarters in Cambridge and has promised to double jobs in the UK over the next five years.

ARM falling into foreign hands will be seen as a shame by advocates of a strong, independent UK tech sector. However, SoftBank has pledged to invest in the company, double headcount in the UK and maintain its Cambridge headquarters

Autore: Fudzilla.com – Home

Categorie
HardwareSoftware

CPU Kaby Lake-X e Skylake-X su socket LGA-2066 nel 2017

Intel ha recentemente posto in commercio una nuova linea di processori Broadwell-E ad alto rendimento. I quattro modelli, tuttavia, utilizzano il chipset X99 e come socket LGA-2011v3, pensato più come soluzione di fascia elevata per i PC domestici che per quelli destinati ad un pubblico professionale.

Per il prossimo futuro, Intel ha in serbo alcune novità. Gli utenti più evoluti e coloro che sono interessati a PC “top di gamma”, avranno a disposizione il nuovo socket LGA-2066. La piattaforma sulla quale “poggia” (Basin Falls X) dovrebbe essere portata al debutto durante l’estate 2017 insieme con i processori Kaby Lake X e Skylake-X.

CPU Kaby Lake-X e Skylake-X su socket LGA-2066 nel 2017

Il primo sarà un modesto quad-core con 16 piste PCIe e TDP di 112 W, capace di supportare memorie DDR4-2400 e DDR4-2666.

Skylake-X, invece, rappresenterà un’evoluzione di Broadwell-E pur non discostandosi molto dalle caratteristiche di queste CPU. Il processore sarà comunque più performante grazie alle 44 piste PCIe 3.0 (anziché le 40 utilizzate nei Broadwell-E).
Il TDP rimarrà pari a 140 W, verrà confermato il supporto Turbo Boost 3.0 e Skylake-X supporterà memorie DDR4 a 2400 e 2666 MHz four-channel.

CPU Kaby Lake-X e Skylake-X su socket LGA-2066 nel 2017

Per entrambe le serie di processori, il chipset sarà KBL PCH-X. Per quanto riguarda Skylake-X, i modelli presentati da Intel integreranno da sei a dieci core fisici.

La società di Santa Clara dovrebbe avviare la produzione dei nuovi processori entro agosto-settembre 2017.

Autore: IlSoftware.it