Intel will have Meltdown and Spectre fixes for 90 percent of recent products within a week

Intel will have Meltdown and Spectre fixes for 90 percent of recent products within a week

6 years ago
Anonymous $1bh8zaeyQS

https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/8/16866600/intel-ceo-spectre-meltdown-updates-fix-brian-krzanich-ces-2018

Speaking today at Intel’s big CES keynote, CEO Brian Krzanich addressed the biggest issue Intel faces today: the security and speed issues surrounding Meltdown and Spectre. “Want to thank the industry for coming together ... to address the recent security research findings reported as Meltdown and Spectre,” Krzanich said, calling the response to the issues a “collaboration among so many companies.”

He promised that “for our processors and products introduced in the past five years, Intel expects to issue updates for more than 90 percent within a week, and the remaining by the end of January.” As for the impact that those updates will cause to performance, Krzanich stuck to Intel’s line that “we believe the performance impact of these updates is highly workload dependent,” though that “some workloads may a larger impact that others, so we’ll continue working with the industry to minimize the impact on those workloads over time.”

Intel will have Meltdown and Spectre fixes for 90 percent of recent products within a week

Jan 9, 2018, 3:13am UTC
https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/8/16866600/intel-ceo-spectre-meltdown-updates-fix-brian-krzanich-ces-2018 >Speaking today at Intel’s big CES keynote, CEO Brian Krzanich addressed the biggest issue Intel faces today: the security and speed issues surrounding Meltdown and Spectre. “Want to thank the industry for coming together ... to address the recent security research findings reported as Meltdown and Spectre,” Krzanich said, calling the response to the issues a “collaboration among so many companies.” >He promised that “for our processors and products introduced in the past five years, Intel expects to issue updates for more than 90 percent within a week, and the remaining by the end of January.” As for the impact that those updates will cause to performance, Krzanich stuck to Intel’s line that “we believe the performance impact of these updates is highly workload dependent,” though that “some workloads may a larger impact that others, so we’ll continue working with the industry to minimize the impact on those workloads over time.”