Ok. A tiny bit less bloated< 297mm² nominal for all Orochi dies.
Ok. A tiny bit less bloated< 297mm² nominal for all Orochi dies.
From the viewpoint of winzip it was a weird 8 core.It was a 315mm2 cpu and from the viewpoint of winzip at least it was very much a 8 core chip. The same way this blender test exposes all the best of the fpu in zen.
But we know its not going to use a gazilion watts and be 315mm2. On the contrary we have a 32c 180w underway.
The point is the situaion is in no way comparable to then. But ofcource those hoping for a skylake desktop competitor on st is ofcource looking the wrong way.
I have really bad memory in regards to things that I just simply glance over. Where was the total rebuild guide for Unix operating systems for OpenCL-HSA or HSA-Compiler instead of C/C++?
From the viewpoint of winzip it was a weird 8 core.
From the viewpoint of anything fpu-heavy, it was a quad core with more ALUs.
Anyways, only few months to go.
We don't know any of this yet (power).But we know its not going to use a gazilion watts and be 315mm2. On the contrary we have a 32c 180w underway.
Fortunately, the server/workstation/HEDT world(s) do not live and die by Geekbench.
We don't know any of this yet (power).
Or if it's clocks suck like Barcelona.
Or if it's performance is 5 years behind Intels.
No, we really don't. Except the die size.
If it is not competitive, they really have no chance. The market is already 98% Intel, and only loves to look at Intel.
AMD has a very tough uphill struggle to even convince companies to consider them today (except HPC).
However, if this chip tanks on mobile, desktop, workstation and most of server -- it could still find a niche. Like in Cloud.
Speaking as an Infrastructure worker in one of the biggest corps in the world -- every major corp I've liaised with is now buying IaaS/PaaS. Gone are the days of locally hosted. You buy VMs from datacentres who sell licensed by the Core. They absolutely love these many low-speed cores. For the hosters, this is what sells. As extra Cores can be included but left on "standby"... Only used and paid for IF required at any one time.
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(Opinions are own)
So you think, the GloFo amendment and stock + senior notes offer and the tanking markets didn't weigh as much as this benchmarked not so final ES?Welp. I guess that explains why AMD stock is tanking. Zen is literally going to be DOA. No one is going to buy a 3.2GHz Zen that performs the same as a 2.5GHz 3570K. If Zen cant even hit 3.2GHz it will be even worse. KBL Core m could very well beat a 95W Zen in single threaded tasks.
You are right, but that is boring way around it.Fortunately, the server/workstation/HEDT world(s) do not live and die by Geekbench.
So it is your opinion that the SMT implementation in Zen will offer no performance gains in MT scenarios?that does not mean that any version of smt gives you gains. (other then being able to run 2 threads at once)
Yeah and the share dilusion has nothing to do with the stock going down to the ammount it is worth with new total numbers of shares.. ...all these traders just cant do math they just look at leaked benches....man wake up!Welp. I guess that explains why AMD stock is tanking. Zen is literally going to be DOA. No one is going to buy a 3.2GHz Zen that performs the same as a 2.5GHz 3570K. If Zen cant even hit 3.2GHz it will be even worse. KBL Core m could very well beat a 95W Zen in single threaded tasks.
Talking Cloud hosting... VMs...
AMD already has a Warsaw 16-core server CPU based on Bulldozer 2nd Gen (Piledriver) 2.3GHz base, 2.6GHz full load and 3.2GHz half-load... at 115W, in the market since 2012.
Nothing with SR/XV, but assuming it did not originally breach 115W under load, down to 85-95W envelope would be a given after 4 years of tuning and maturity (even PD to SR in 2 years became 95>65W -- remember TDPs are not actual power draw).
Moving that to 14nm FF, I'd expect, away from the obvious size shrinkage, the same XV to run at 2.6GHz base at 85W as the minimum.
With the FO4 being similar, wider + increased resources + SMT, Zen on the same process should enable (+15% power) a 2.3GHz base 16-core/32-thread CPU at 105-115W still on 28nm (GF28A).
Combined with a full node shrink + FF (-25% power), I'd expect 2.3GHz base for a 18-core 36-thread 115W CPU, as the very minimum if the process was OK. Up to 2.6GHz I'd expect as a given.
Talking Cloud hosting... VMs...
I don't know if that kind of estimation is going to work. You have to remember that there's only one 8-core die involved but you can get up to 4 of them on a socket connected via GMI. Even Warsaw is basically a 2 die model.
The one die base is 2.8 Ghz at 95 W.
The four die base is 1.44 Ghz at 180W (?) (45 W/die, seems like it should be less with the clock speed halved)
That's why I'm talking server and kept it inline with the official TDPs.Except on Opterons the TDP applies only on the base (non-boosted) frequency and is a "typical figure" (don't know the actual definition for this), not the maximum unlike on consumer parts.
Opteron 6380 - 115W TDP - 2.5GHz base - 133.2W maximum power @ base
Opteron 6386 - 140W TDP - 2.8GHz base - 156.7W maximum power @ base
The two quoted CPUs are Zen based? I think you are talking about different dies here, 1 Server and 1 DT.The one die base is 2.8 Ghz at 95 W.
The four die base is 1.44 Ghz at 180W (?) (45 W/die, seems like it should be less with the clock speed halved)
I think you are talking about different dies here, 1 Server and 1 DT.
The one die base is 2.8 Ghz at 95 W.
The four die base is 1.44 Ghz at 180W (?) (45 W/die, seems like it should be less with the clock speed halved)
Abwx, its highly unrealistic. IIRC the TDPs, that appeared somewhere for the server parts are 150 and 180W. Secondly, do not take seriously the core clocks that you see right now, they will be higher on all of the CPUs from range, at least thats what logic dictates.
Thirdly. 95W TDP IMO is only for "modest" mid-range High-End desktop CPUs from AMD. Wraith Cooler is designed to work with 125W TDP, so I think we have to look at 8 core Black Edition Zen CPU at that TDP, with 4 and 6 core variants at 95W.
I don't think that core clocks, and power consumption scale that linearly as you point it out.
Yeah, but you ignore the entire fact that Naples has all the uncore (that consumes relatively constant amount of power) of 4 ZP dies.Because you thought that the numbers above are linear scalings..?.
These are power scaling wich mean that power increase as a square of frequency, most ironic is that some people pointed that it could be a scaling that is far from ideal, ideal being namely this square law, but then if they are above a square law, and close to a cubic law, then it means that from 3GHz to 1.5GHz, or whetever lower frequency, power would scale down much more than what i posted above...
A huge die as a bonus.
Bd was 315 mm2 !!! Good grief.