Intel's E2200 "Mount Morgan" IPU at Hot Chips 2025

(chipsandcheese.com)

67 points | by ingve 11 hours ago ago

28 comments

  • msuniverse2026 18 minutes ago ago

    Is the name based on the Australian Mount Morgan that was once the largest gold mine in the world? One of the owners of it invested everything earned from the mine into Persian oil exploration and created what eventually became BP.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Knox_D%27Arcy

  • mappu 9 hours ago ago

    This is Intel making a 24 core Neoverse N2 server on TSMC - not their ISA, not their core design, and not their fab

    • pclmulqdq 7 hours ago ago

      This isn't really a server. This is a NIC with some small cores to help handle management functions. The server you plug it into will have hundreds of x86 cores.

    • wmf 8 hours ago ago

      Barefoot was always on TSMC so why change now.

    • Palomides 8 hours ago ago

      the arm cores are absolutely the least interesting part of this thing, does it matter much if they're outsourced?

    • matt-p 9 hours ago ago

      Yep, it's only recently they've even properly started cranking out 10nm themselves. Pretty embarrassing. I wonder what future we have if everyone is just sat ontop of TSMC, not great.

      • wtallis 9 hours ago ago

        You must be using odd definitions for "properly" and "recently". Intel started volume shipments of 10nm-family parts for laptops in 2019, servers in 2021, and desktops in 2022. They've since moved most of their products off of the 10nm family and onto EUV-based processes: two generations of laptop parts, one generation of desktop parts, and the CPU chiplets of last year's server parts (which still use "Intel 7" for the IO chiplets).

        Additionally, the second and third round of desktop parts released on 10nm (aka "Intel 7") are now known to have pushed clocks and voltages somewhat beyond the limits of the process, leading to embarrassing reliability problems and microcode updates that hurt performance. Intel has squeezed everything they can out of their 10nm and have mostly put it behind them, so talking about it like they only recently ramped production is totally wrong about where they are in the lifecycle.

      • aseipp 9 hours ago ago

        What? Intel has been doing large scale production runs of their 10nm node for years now. If you're talking about Raptor Lake failures, that was one generation of products on that note, there has also never been any indication AFAIK that e.g. Emerald Rapids suffered the same oxidization/voltage failures the consumer line did despite being on the same process node. They're already moving on from all this, really.

      • SecretDreams 8 hours ago ago

        This is some quite outdated/interesting hot takes.

      • colechristensen 9 hours ago ago

        Missteps happen but I have a feeling Intel's fab is going to be forced to be near the leading edge one way or another. The US government has plenty of levers to pull to manipulate the global semiconductor market.

  • matt-p 9 hours ago ago

    Hah, I was not imagining it https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Pentium+E2200... same name as an old cpu.

    • blakehawkins 3 hours ago ago

      I had one of these

      Color me confused

  • rwmj 2 hours ago ago

    Intel putting CPUs on an expansion card? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Inboard_386

  • jeffbee 9 hours ago ago

    It's quite interesting. Basically Nitro on a stick. For the "repatriation" crowd this seems appealing. But would you invest in the software necessary to exploit this, knowing that Intel could lose interest or just go bankrupt with little warning?

    • pwarner 6 hours ago ago

      Presumably all hyperscalers who aren't Amazon could be a customer for this? One of them might be enough to keep it viable. See sibling comment on b Google being a customer for presumably the previous generation.

    • wmf 8 hours ago ago

      I wouldn't be surprised if Google buys the IP since they're the only customer.

    • lenerdenator 8 hours ago ago

      I think at this point, it's clear that the US government will not let Intel go bankrupt without a serious effort to put the company in healthy financial standing first.

      Whether or not that's a good thing, well, people have their opinions, but they're considered a national security necessity.

    • jiggawatts 7 hours ago ago

      That begs the question: how would one go about utilising this thing in their own deployment?

  • YesThatTom2 8 hours ago ago

    I hope their Linux code isn’t as out-dated and buggy as their IPMI system.

  • trebligdivad 9 hours ago ago

    The ability to connect to 4 hosts makes it seem like MRIOV all over again! Still, it does look like a fun device from the 'big arm chip with lots of connectivity' side