Toshiba
has announced a new processor designed to dramatically improve video processing
and image quality in consumer electronics devices.
SpursEngine is a high-performance stream processor integrating Synergistic
Processing Element (SPE) cores derived from the Cell Broadband Engine.
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The Cell processor is designed to bridge the gap between conventional desktop
processors and more specialised high-performance processors, such as those used
in graphics processors.
Jointly developed by Toshiba,
Sony and
IBM, the chip is
best known as the power behind Sony's PlayStation 3 console.
The SpursEngine prototype will be unveiled at
Ceatec
2007 in Japan from 2 October.
Unlike Cell processors, SpursEngine is designed as a co-processor that works
in cooperation with a host CPU, using Toshiba's image processing technology to
perform stream processing of video sources and image recognition.
SpursEngine uses a Risc core architecture plus hardware dedicated to decoding
and encoding MPEG-2 and H.264 video.
By combining the real-time processing software of the SPEs with the hardware
video codecs, Toshiba reckons that SpursEngine provides a balance of processing
flexibility and low power consumption which is vital in the development of
portable consumer electronics.
The prototype operates at a clock frequency of 1.5GHz and consumes power at
10 to 20 watts.
Toshiba plans to showcase a range of notebooks integrating SpursEngine at
Ceatec in the first public demonstration of the processor's capabilities in 3D
image processing and manipulation.
The demo will include real-time transformations of hair styles and makeup
that instantaneously recognise and process changes in position, angle and facial
expression, and render them as computer graphics.
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