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Sriram Vangal is the principal research scientist at Intel.
Sriram joined Intel in 1995, working on two generations of the i960 embedded RISC processors. He joined the advanced prototyping team at Circuit Research Labs in 1997 and played a lead role in the development of several “first” successful silicon prototypes: 5+GHz integer execution unit (2001), high-throughput floating-point units (2003) and TCP/IP off-load engines (2004).
Sriram was the technical lead for the advanced prototype team that designed the industry's first single-chip 80-core, sub-100W “Polaris” TeraFLOPS processor (2006), and more recently the 48-iA core “Rock Creek” single-chip cloud computer (SCC). Google them for more details..
Sriram's research interests are in the areas of low-power high-performance circuits, tera-scale computing, SoC and NTV (near-threshold voltage) design methodologies, network-on-chip (NoC) based multi-processing and fine-grained power management techniques. Sriram has received two Intel Achievement Awards; first in 2007 for his work on Polaris and second one in 2010 for Rock Creek. Sriram has published 20+ journal and conference papers including two book chapters on on-die interconnects, and has 16 issued patents with 8 pending in these areas.
Sriram joined Intel in 1995, working on two generations of the i960 embedded RISC processors. He joined the advanced prototyping team at Circuit Research Labs in 1997 and played a lead role in the development of several “first” successful silicon prototypes: 5+GHz integer execution unit (2001), high-throughput floating-point units (2003) and TCP/IP off-load engines (2004).
Sriram was the technical lead for the advanced prototype team that designed the industry's first single-chip 80-core, sub-100W “Polaris” TeraFLOPS processor (2006), and more recently the 48-iA core “Rock Creek” single-chip cloud computer (SCC). Google them for more details..
Sriram's research interests are in the areas of low-power high-performance circuits, tera-scale computing, SoC and NTV (near-threshold voltage) design methodologies, network-on-chip (NoC) based multi-processing and fine-grained power management techniques. Sriram has received two Intel Achievement Awards; first in 2007 for his work on Polaris and second one in 2010 for Rock Creek. Sriram has published 20+ journal and conference papers including two book chapters on on-die interconnects, and has 16 issued patents with 8 pending in these areas.