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Accelerated processing unit

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An accelerated processing unit (APU) is a processing system that includes additional processing capability designed to accelerate one or more types of computations outside of a CPU. This may include a graphics processing unit (GPU) used for general-purpose computing (GPGPU), a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), or similar specialized processing system. Variations on the usage of this term include a variation in which the APU is described as a processing device which integrates a CPU and an OpenCL compatible GPU on the same die, thus improving data transfer rates between these components while reducing power consumption by upwards of 50% with current technology over traditional architecture.[1] APUs can also include video processing and other application-specific accelerators. Examples include AMD Accelerated Processing Unit, Cell, Intel HD Graphics, and NVIDIA's Project Denver.

The term accelerated processing unit was first used in a public context with respect to accelerated computing in 2006,[2] and prior to that in various presentations and business plans written by Joe Landman[3] of Scalable Informatics.[4] Other uses include Xilinx using the term for an auxiliary processor unit. Also they are shit for processing.

See also

References

  1. ^ "What is an APU?", Net flow developments (World Wide Web log entry), 2012‐5‐3 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ "Accelerator Processor Units (APUs) for non-scientific applications". Scalability. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  3. ^ http://scalability.org/?page_id=96
  4. ^ http://scalableinformatics.com/