Intel Shows First Light Peak Laptop, 10Gbps Transfer Only Beginning!


Recommended Posts

Intel shows off first Light Peak laptop

Intel has provided the first hands-on demonstration of a laptop running its Light Peak technology, at the company's inaugural European research showcase here in Brussels.

Light Peak is an optical interconnect that can transfer data at 10Gbits/sec in both directions. Intel hopes Light Peak will one day replace the host of other PC interconnects, including USB, DisplayPort and HDMI.

100504-lightpeak-01.jpg

Intel has fitted Light Peak into a regular USB cable, with optical fibres running alongside the electrical cabling. Intel provided a visual demonstration of how data is passed through the cable, by shining a torch into one end of the cable, with two little dots of light visible to the naked eye at the other end.

The demonstration laptop was sending two separate HD video streams to a nearby television screen, without any visible lag. The laptop includes a 12mm square chip that converts the optical light into electrical data that the computer understands. The technology hasn't yet been integrated into the screen, which explains the ugly black box sitting between the two devices.

Intel's chief technology officer, Justin Rattner, claimed that the bandwidth afforded by the optical technology is practically unlimited. "Light Peak begins at 10Gbits/sec, simultaneously in both directions," he said. "We expect to increase that speed dramatically. You'll see multiple displays being served by a single Light Peak connection. There's almost no limit to the bandwidth - fibres can carry trillions of bits per second".

Rattner said the technology will find its way into everything from home PCs to server farms. "The potential of that headroom will lead people to rethink the design of their systems," he said. "We've very, very excited about the potential of Light Peak."

An Intel spokesman said Light Peak hardware should start to become available to manufacturers by the end of this year.

Article @ PCPro

''There's almost no limit to the bandwidth - fibres can carry trillions of bits per second". w00t.gif

''There's almost no limit to the bandwidth - fibres can carry trillions of bits per second". w00t.gif

But there is a limit on the conversion of those light pulses into electrical signals, and then the bandwidth of the BUS on both sides of the connection.

But it's still pretty awesome!

Because you own it and are hoping to rake in the money?

Probably, but it makes perfect sense. With this much bandwidth, there's not a single connection that couldn't benefit from this.

Probably, but it makes perfect sense. With this much bandwidth, there's not a single connection that couldn't benefit from this.

There are cons too though. Most hardware wouldn't benefit from it at the moment, because they simply can't (and don't need to) operate at those kinds of speeds. Your keyboard now needs more expensive hardware, including an optical transceiver. At the moment ASICS, microcontrollers, and application processors have on-chip USB. The only external electronics normally used is a couple of resistors. That makes for cheap and accessible hardware, even for hobbyists.

Of course, while this is an unfortunate side effect, it's not a real argument against new technology. The technology isn't really the problem. The problem is it being owned by a single corporation and not open. I don't know if that's true for LightPeak, but if it is, it's not good. I don't want everything to have to have Intel-made LightPeak controllers. In that scenario, I think it might be more preferable to go with something else, even if it means reducing the bandwidth in half.

If Itel does this right USB 3.0 is pretty screwed.

Why do you think there's no USB3 on most new motherboards? They made it a lot harder for companies like ASUS to add the technology because unlike USB2 they have to add another chip made by someone else (because Intel hasn't bothered to include USB3 support yet).

If Intel plays their cards right USB3 will never really take off and they'll push Light Peak to everyone

Why do you think there's no USB3 on most new motherboards? They made it a lot harder for companies like ASUS to add the technology because unlike USB2 they have to add another chip made by someone else (because Intel hasn't bothered to include USB3 support yet).

If Intel plays their cards right USB3 will never really take off and they'll push Light Peak to everyone

I agree.

Why do you think there's no USB3 on most new motherboards? They made it a lot harder for companies like ASUS to add the technology because unlike USB2 they have to add another chip made by someone else (because Intel hasn't bothered to include USB3 support yet).

If Intel plays their cards right USB3 will never really take off and they'll push Light Peak to everyone

look like LP will takeover the system wiring and will use other interfaces like USB3 first

they are saying product featuring LP will start to pop out by the end of the year

Light Peak is an optical interconnect that can transfer data at 10Gbits/sec in both directions. Intel hopes Light Peak will one day replace the host of other PC interconnects, including USB, DisplayPort and HDMI.

That doesn't mean it will replace these other technologies. Even if it does it's going to take years to take place.

I won't be impressed, until I get some sort of storage that will operate at 10 GB/second.

That's Gbps people, so in reality you might get 1024MB/s (or 1GB/s) It's not too far off but then you gotta realize LP is not just for storage, your monitor and all this other stuff can be connected via LP so then the bandwidth available wont be just for storage, it will have to share. Some SSDs are pushing 300MB/s and they will only get faster by 12/2011 :)

That's Gbps people, so in reality you might get 1024MB/s (or 1GB/s) It's not too far off but then you gotta realize LP is not just for storage, your monitor and all this other stuff can be connected via LP so then the bandwidth available wont be just for storage, it will have to share. Some SSDs are pushing 300MB/s and they will only get faster by 12/2011 :)

actually some SSD now push over 600MB/s if i am not wrong but that is using PCIe interface

i can think of OCZ Z drive of top of my head

There are cons too though. Most hardware wouldn't benefit from it at the moment, because they simply can't (and don't need to) operate at those kinds of speeds. Your keyboard now needs more expensive hardware, including an optical transceiver. At the moment ASICS, microcontrollers, and application processors have on-chip USB. The only external electronics normally used is a couple of resistors. That makes for cheap and accessible hardware, even for hobbyists.

Of course, while this is an unfortunate side effect, it's not a real argument against new technology. The technology isn't really the problem. The problem is it being owned by a single corporation and not open. I don't know if that's true for LightPeak, but if it is, it's not good. I don't want everything to have to have Intel-made LightPeak controllers. In that scenario, I think it might be more preferable to go with something else, even if it means reducing the bandwidth in half.

If Intel decide to use the USB connection like they have so far then it won't be an issue as cheap components like Mice and Keyboards can continue to use the electrical properties of the USB connector and ignore the lightpeak optical connectors in the cable. That is the great thing about this technology it only requires very little space in the connector and so they can easily insert it in to the USB connector without breaking the USB connectors compatability with pre-exsisting usb ports.

I'm really excited about this technology. I need fast networking. My options today are limited to teaming connections (low cost, lots of cables) or using Fibrechannel (high cost). Light Peak would end all that.

there is a huge difference between Gb/s and GB/s

I knew what was said, but I think I still subliminally changed it. Either way, it's obvious for where the limitations for data transfer is. And $1000 for 256 pseudo GB with transfer speeds that get up to 640 MBps is not the way to get there.

  • 2 weeks later...

10Gbps isn't enough to drive a High Resolution Monitor, so i hope they can get 20+ to start with, to match the speed of DisplayPort 2.0

Hopefully within 5 years time it will replace every external cable. Afterall using Copper to archive these kind of speed is rather expensive compare to LP which has yet to scale up in production and drive cost down.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Exactly. They won't go 100 because current gen consoles are simply too old for any groundbreaking graphics or gaming experience otherwise. They will go with standard (console) price 70 or go with 80 if they really want to go premium. Of course they will have more expensive options too with some useless cosmetics as always.
    • Doesn’t surprise me at all. God is light & He gave us life so it sounds almost logical that we would therefore emit a certain amount of light.
    • This is what I want. Hey Gemini, how do I remove you from all my google products permanently?
    • I would never install install this build before rtm process. only 3 months to go. never install on your daily devices. just wait 3 months.
    • Motrix Next 3.9.6 by Razvan Serea Motrix Next is a modern, open-source cross-platform download manager built as the official next-generation successor to the original Motrix project. It has been completely rewritten using Tauri 2, Vue 3, TypeScript, and Rust, while still relying on the powerful Aria2 download engine for high-speed multi-protocol transfers. The app supports HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, BitTorrent, ED2K and magnet links, offering advanced features like multi-connection acceleration, task scheduling, bandwidth control, and batch download management. With a significantly reduced install size (around 20MB), it focuses on being lightweight, fast, and resource-efficient compared to traditional Electron-based download tools. Designed for Windows, macOS, and Linux, Motrix Next delivers a clean, modern UI inspired by Material Design 3 principles, with smooth animations and a minimal workflow. It improves usability through better download organization, system tray integration, and enhanced torrent handling including selective file downloads and tracker management. Motrix Next features: Multi-protocol downloads — HTTP, FTP, BitTorrent, Magnet, .torrent, ED2K, and Metalink tasks BitTorrent — Selective file download, DHT, peer exchange, encryption controls, metadata caching, GeoIP peer flags, and tracker probing Browser extension integration — Embedded Extension API with independent authentication, download confirmation, smart auto-submit, filename hints, referer/cookie forwarding, and real-time controls (Chrome Web Store · Edge Add-ons) Safe filename handling — Content-Disposition, RFC 2047, non-UTF-8, percent-encoded, and extensionless URL resolution with path traversal sanitization Download organization — Favorite and recent folders, optional file-type categorization, stale-record cleanup, and completed history backed by SQLite Concurrent downloads — Independent controls for active tasks, HTTP connections per server, segments per file, and BT peer limits Speed control — Global and per-task upload/download limits with day-of-week and time-of-day scheduling System integration — Tray operation, optional tray speed display, macOS Dock badge/progress, protocol handlers for magnet://, thunder://, and motrixnext:// Lightweight mode — Destroys the WebView on minimize-to-tray while Rust keeps the engine, task monitor, notifications, history, and extension routing alive Notifications and power options — Native task start/complete/failure notifications, keep-awake during downloads, and optional shutdown after completion Network controls — Scoped proxy support for downloads, app updates, and tracker updates, plus system proxy detection Auto-update channels — Stable, Beta, and Latest Across Channels policies with separate download and install phases Diagnostics — Structured logs, exportable diagnostic ZIPs, database integrity checks, automatic DB rebuild, and Linux GPU rendering fallback Personalization — Light/dark/system theme, 10 color schemes, 26 languages, and first-launch system language detection Motrix Next 3.9.6 changelog: New Features Clipboard management — App-owned copy actions no longer trigger the Add Task auto-detect popup. aria2 input compatibility — Multi-line aria2-style task input is supported for URLs with per-task options such as out=. BitTorrent IPv6 DHT — Added IPv6 DHT support and related configuration. File category URL patterns — File category rules can match URL patterns with validation and localized hints. Task status tags — Added clearer waiting and sharing states for task cards. Download event bridge — Added an aria2 WebSocket event bridge for faster download notifications. Improvements Improved task list transitions and preserved task state during tab switches. Kept RPC origin access enabled for local integrations. Restored AppImage stripping in release builds after beta validation. Added localized preference guidance across supported languages. Download: Motrix Next 64-bit | ARM64 | macOS ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Links: Website | macOS / Linux | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      sumytbe earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      B4dM1k3 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      DarkWun earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Dedicated
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Dedicated
      JuvenileDelinquent earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      508
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      181
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      86
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      78
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!