PLANO, TX / ACCESSWIRE / J/ Torchlight Energy Resources, Inc. (NASDAQ:TRCH), an oil and gas exploration company ('Torchlight'), today announced that Torchlight and Metamaterial Inc. ('Metamaterial') have agreed to extend the outside date by which Torchlight and Metamaterial must close their business combination transaction (the "Arrangement") to June 30, 2021. The extension provides time for the Jrecord date and the June 25th payment date of the special Series A Preferred Stock dividend, declared on June 14, 2021, to transpire. The payment date for the Series A Preferred Stock dividend will be June 25 th. The Company expects to close the Arrangement no later than June 30 th, 2021. (TRCH), based in Plano, Texas, is a high growth oil and gas Exploration and Production (E&P) company with a primary objective of acquisition and development of domestic oil fields. For additional information on Torchlight, please visit Forward-Looking Statement Torchlight has assets focused in West and Central Texas where their targets are established plays such as the Permian Basin. This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which are intended to be covered by the 'safe harbor' created by those sections. All statements in this release that are not based on historical fact are 'forward looking statements.' These statements may be identified by words such as 'estimates,' 'anticipates,' 'projects,' 'plans,' 'strategy,' 'goal,' or 'planned,' 'seeks,' 'may,' 'might', 'will,' 'expects,' 'intends,' 'believes,' 'should,' and similar expressions, or the negative versions thereof, and which also may be identified by their context. #Torchlight special dividend date seriesĪll statements that address operating performance or events or developments Torchlight expects or anticipates will occur in the future, such as stated objectives or goals, our refinement of strategy, our attempts to secure additional financing, our exploring possible business alternatives, or that are not otherwise historical facts, are forward-looking statements.This week Intel unveiled Compute Express Link (CXL), the chipmaker’s own cache coherent accelerator interconnect that it is grooming to become the industry standard. To do that however, it has to convince the backers of CCIX and OpenCAPI to jump ship. To further that goal, Intel has simultaneously booted up the CXL consortium, a group that contains of some of the heaviest hitters in the industry, in particular, Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Dell EMC, Alibaba, Cisco, and Huawei. The goal of establishing a cache coherent interconnect standard is certainly laudable. Computational accelerators, like GPUs and FPGAs, and purpose-built machine learning chips like TPUs are becoming more commonplace in server gear, especially in datacenters doing HPC and AI. To that mix, you can add memory expansion devices which can act as storage class memory inside a server. With all these gadgets hanging off PCIe ports, vendors have been looking for ways make the connection between the host CPU and these devices faster and more transparent to the application.Ĭache coherency is key to ease of use, since it allows code running on these devices to directly access host and local memory in a shared address space. That’s the critical feature missing from PCI-Express, the interconnect of choice for most accelerators and embedded memory devices these days. It was designed to provide its users a seamless, secure and anonymous way to transact with one another using digital wallets and digital currency. Cache coherency simplifies programming considerably and relieves the application from copying data back and forth between host and coprocessor memories depending on which chip needs access to it at the moment.Īt this point CXL appears to be functionally quite similar to the Cache Coherence Interconnect for Accelerators (CCIX), a technology we first reported on in 2016. Bilibili hk960m Network Chinese Taptap is a uniquely designed system of smart payment platform made by renowned Hong Kong-based mobile network provider, Bilibili. This essay will explore the key features of Bilibili HK960m X.d., its impact on the gaming industry, and the future potential of this game. Since then, the CCIX consortium has gathered dozens of members and is currently backed by multiple chipmakers, including AMD, Arm, Xilinx, Marvell/Cavium, and Ampere, as well as OEMs such as IBM, Lenovo, Fujitsu, and Cray. Network vendors Mellanox (soon to be part of Nvidia) and Broadcom have also signed up. Intel and the CXL consortium have not released much in the way of details of what constitutes the technology, especially since the ink on the specification is barely dry yet. We’ll be speaking to these folks in the not-too-distant future to get a better sense of how they intend to position CXL in the market and when we should start to see the first products.
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