>850About how many Zen 5 compute dies per wafer to they get assuming 100% yield?
The neat part is they still get >400 even with a defect density that no one would consider viable for modern high volume manufacturing.
>850About how many Zen 5 compute dies per wafer to they get assuming 100% yield?
Which is exactly why monolithic design is a dead end for the future. I don't see how a monolithic design can hope to compete with a chiplet design. Seems like AMD figured out a way to get the latency down between tiles, and/or found ways to work around it. Intel needs (really badly) to do the same .... and quick.>850
The neat part is they still get >400 even with a defect density that no one would consider viable for modern high volume manufacturing.
AMD was on maybe second iteration of Construction core in 2012, I think they didn't even bring in Keller until after that. They ran the Construction cores all the way into AM4 even.AMD was preparing for the turnaround since 2012. When did Intel even start to prepare? Then add 5 years to that date and check if Intel managed or is in progress to manage that, assuming Intel can match AMD's nimbleness.
There is an interview with Keller in which he says was brought in by the CEO Rory Read to help build Zen. That was in 2012.Point is, Zen wasn't concepted in 2012,
Zen: The Beginning
Ian Cutress: This quarter for AMD is all about the 5 Years of Zen and Ryzen, ever since those press events and first microarchitecture disclosures at Hot Chips in August 2016. Realistically, when did the Zen journey start for you - who were the big names, and were you the lead architect off the bat?
Mike Clark: Well, it started in 2012 for me. We realized we needed to do something different from the Bulldozer line. Jim came in and helped re-organize the team, and I was the Lead Architect. So it's been almost 10 years for me.
For personnel, since we started in 2012, there are so many people, and the team is awesome. I am so thankful that I get to represent the work of so many awesome engineers. Suzanne Plummer was the lead of the Zen team, managing the team, and was just keeping the team together, she was just awesome. Then there’s also Mike Tuuk, Tim Wilkens, Jay Fleischman, Leslie Barnes - all kinds of people that were contributing from all parts of the company to make Zen a success.
So it's kind of funny to say I’ve been working on it since 2012 - if I go back, I still have our HLD (High-Level Design) deck that we did for Zen. You wouldn't believe how different, after taking five years to get something to production, it looks. I mean the bones are still there, you see it, but so many things changed along the way. That's one of the keys of this business - being able to be dynamic and have things change because it's such a long time. But also still be able to deliver a competitive design, it’s pretty amazing. Once in a while, when we were starting up, when the teams were worried or feeling weird about their HLD, I'm the one who turned around and said that ‘this is what Zen was, everything's not going to be perfect coming out HLD, stuff is going to change, and it's going to get better’. So that's the art of this job.
WOW. I did NOT know that! https://www.anandtech.com/show/11669/amd-releases-bristol-ridge-to-retail-am4-gets-apusThey ran the Construction cores all the way into AM4 even.
Backporting a 20a/TSMC N3 design to Intel 3 would be a mistake. Porting Raptor Cove to Intel 3 would be . . . okay-ish? Intel 4 isn't going to see anymore use so there's no point in mentioning it. Intel 3 is just flat-out better.I'm thinking at least an Intel 3 based performance part that instills the public's confidence in their engineering capabilities.
They just need to replace the Skymonts with two Lion Cove cores in this: https://www.intel.com/content/www/u...-12m-cache-up-to-5-30-ghz/specifications.htmlBackporting a 20a/TSMC N3 design to Intel 3 would be a mistake.
Nah that would make less sense than trying to do the same thing on TSMC N3B.They just need to replace the Skymonts with two Lion Cove cores in this: https://www.intel.com/content/www/u...-12m-cache-up-to-5-30-ghz/specifications.html
and stitch three of them together for a quasi-monolithic 12-core gaming CPU based on high clocking leaky dies.
You know that is kind of the point of a turnaround? Trying to live off of what's already there while getting and taking the time needed to work on something that can turn the ship around?AMD was on maybe second iteration of Construction core in 2012, I think they didn't even bring in Keller until after that. They ran the Construction cores all the way into AM4 even.
Rory Read and the board of directors saw in 2011 that AMD's then current roadmap was leading to doom and brought in Mark Papermaster as CTO. He and other IBM veterans on the board then brought on other IBM veterans in different leadership positions, Lisa Su was one of them. Keller came on later as the result of those earlier changes.Point is, Zen wasn't concepted in 2012
You are taking it wrong. I'm not trying to strawman you, I'm using your post as a peg to turn the spotlight on what needs to happen at Intel for a turnaround and how to easily check whether Intel may be in progress of one or not. Products released are the results of years of setting up structures within the company and planing of roadmaps, then working on specific products to launch.You are trying to strawman me, based off what you remember from AMD in 2012.
Let me help, Bulldozer 2011, Piledriver 2012, then was Steamroller, which never released on desktop, then Carrizo, also a laptop only part.
WOW. I did NOT know that! https://www.anandtech.com/show/11669/amd-releases-bristol-ridge-to-retail-am4-gets-apus
So if they really wanted, they could release cheap 5900X3D2 with two V-cache dies on AM5! Only trouble is, they are not desperate for money anymore![]()
Just noticed this remark. I had a 7700k and a 7870k, both Steamroller APUs, in a desktop motherboard with desktop form-factor (FM2+). Not sure if that's really the focus of this topic per se, but there you have it.Steamroller, which never released on desktop
Let me re-iterate: In a world that has seen Pentium 4 and Bulldozer, I see no reason why companies shouldn't take risks. 5900X3D2 (prototype exists!) on AM5 wouldn't be any less crazy than consumer Zen 5 with massive FPU with no way to properly feed it (AVX-512 needs insane RAM bandwidth) or Arrow Lake that should never have seen the light of day with its myriad of unbalanced performance related issues. Better that AMD create weird products while they are financially healthy rather than introduce something crazy when they are down on their luck.but I think you are serious more often than not.
But what's the point of such a product? A 7900X3D is faster in practically every workload, and it's cheaper to manufacture than your hypothetical CPU would be.Let me re-iterate: In a world that has seen Pentium 4 and Bulldozer, I see no reason why companies shouldn't take risks. 5900X3D2 (prototype exists!) on AM5 wouldn't be any less crazy than consumer Zen 5 with massive FPU with no way to properly feed it (AVX-512 needs insane RAM bandwidth) or Arrow Lake that should never have seen the light of day with its myriad of unbalanced performance related issues. Better that AMD create weird products while they are financially healthy rather than introduce something crazy when they are down on their luck.
Assuming it is financially viable (not more expensive than the 7900X3D), we let the market decide whether it wants it or not. Release it as a limited edition like the 5600X3D.But what's the point of such a product?
Let me re-iterate: In a world that has seen Pentium 4 and Bulldozer, I see no reason why companies shouldn't take risks. 5900X3D2 (prototype exists!) on AM5 wouldn't be any less crazy than consumer Zen 5 with massive FPU with no way to properly feed it (AVX-512 needs insane RAM bandwidth) or Arrow Lake that should never have seen the light of day with its myriad of unbalanced performance related issues. Better that AMD create weird products while they are financially healthy rather than introduce something crazy when they are down on their luck.
To give some new engineers experience? Maybe it's as simple as pairing the Zen 5 IOD with the older compute dies (Zen3+ exists)? Maybe we are underestimating AMD engineers and they can build like Legos since that's what their focus has been, unlike Intel who prefer the moronic and expensive way of doing things? Maybe they have surplus Zen 3 dies and first gen V-cache?Why spend time and resources redoing it for AM5?
To give some new engineers experience? Maybe it's as simple as pairing the Zen 5 IOD with the older compute dies (Zen3+ exists)? Maybe we are underestimating AMD engineers and they can build like Legos since that's what their focus has been, unlike Intel who prefer the moronic and expensive way of doing things? Maybe they have surplus Zen 3 dies and first gen V-cache?
Tell that to AMD. Someone I know got a 7520U laptop manufactured in July 2024. I was like, there should be laws against this deception. Clearly advertise laptop as, "Disclaimer: CPU will run 99% of x86 software but it's based on 2019 technology".Just seems like a waste of resources.
This is exactly correct. These patterns at Intel show a company that has failed to identify key strategic moves, has switched gears painfully only to switch back, and then looks to switch gears again.You know that is kind of the point of a turnaround? Trying to live off of what's already there while getting and taking the time needed to work on something that can turn the ship around?
Rory Read and the board of directors saw in 2011 that AMD's then current roadmap was leading to doom and brought in Mark Papermaster as CTO. He and other IBM veterans on the board then brought on other IBM veterans in different leadership positions, Lisa Su was one of them. Keller came on later as the result of those earlier changes.
You are taking it wrong. I'm not trying to strawman you, I'm using your post as a peg to turn the spotlight on what needs to happen at Intel for a turnaround and how to easily check whether Intel may be in progress of one or not. Products released are the results of years of setting up structures within the company and planing of roadmaps, then working on specific products to launch.
But your example should still help enlightening others since that pattern should sound very familiar, after all Intel had plenty of mobile only cores. Also the repeat of Construction cores well into AM4 should also sound familiar, after all Intel did the same first with Skylake and then with Alder Lake. Unfortunately I'm still not really seeing Intel's Zen turnaround moment, neither in the leadership structure nor in the products.
Ok you got me, Keller didn't come on until August of 2012.There is an interview with Keller in which he says was brought in by the CEO Rory Read to help build Zen. That was in 2012.
That Zen started in 2012 is also confirmed in Clark's interview in 2021.
Zen: The Beginning
IC: This quarter for AMD is all about the 5 Years of Zen and Ryzen, ever since those press events and first microarchitecture disclosures at Hot Chips in August 2016. Realistically, when did the Zen journey start for you - who were the big names, and were you the lead architect off the bat?
MC: Well, it started in 2012 for me. We realized we needed to do something different from the Bulldozer line. Jim came in and helped re-organize the team, and I was the Lead Architect. So it's been almost 10 years for me.
I agree with second half of your statement. Also that you may not have tried strawing me, but 2012 is 4 quarters,You know that is kind of the point of a turnaround? Trying to live off of what's already there while getting and taking the time needed to work on something that can turn the ship around?
Rory Read and the board of directors saw in 2011 that AMD's then current roadmap was leading to doom and brought in Mark Papermaster as CTO. He and other IBM veterans on the board then brought on other IBM veterans in different leadership positions, Lisa Su was one of them. Keller came on later as the result of those earlier changes.
You are taking it wrong. I'm not trying to strawman you, I'm using your post as a peg to turn the spotlight on what needs to happen at Intel for a turnaround and how to easily check whether Intel may be in progress of one or not. Products released are the results of years of setting up structures within the company and planing of roadmaps, then working on specific products to launch.
But your example should still help enlightening others since that pattern should sound very familiar, after all Intel had plenty of mobile only cores. Also the repeat of Construction cores well into AM4 should also sound familiar, after all Intel did the same first with Skylake and then with Alder Lake. Unfortunately I'm still not really seeing Intel's Zen turnaround moment, neither in the leadership structure nor in the products.
MC: It definitely takes a big investment because of the long timeframe. With that long lead time, it's tough for the business - the market wants a product every year, and you keep trying to refresh, waiting for the new big thing to come. So it was definitely necessary so that we could do what we needed to do to get the job done.
It was a tough time. I mean, one of the hardest problems we had was holding the team together. A lot of people did leave, and it was a very aggressive programme. From where we were, we spent a lot of time both trying to convince people that we would succeed.
These were all APUs A10 - 7700k and and A10- 7850k. Some were released in FM2+ sockets, but all were Kaveri parts which IIRC would be going up against Haswell or the Ivy Bridge tick.Just noticed this remark. I had a 7700k and a 7870k, both Steamroller APUs, in a desktop motherboard with desktop form-factor (FM2+). Not sure if that's really the focus of this topic per se, but there you have it.
Ok you got me, Keller didn't come on until August of 2012.
Ian Cutress interview
I agree with second half of your statement. Also that you may not have tried strawing me, but 2012 is 4 quarters,
Keller came in August 2012.
EDIT: @moinmoin I am thinking its more semantics now. Thank you for the Cutress article, long but worthy read.
Also, wasn't Skylake the second 14nm? I honestly can't remember.
From the Papermaster interview.
These were all APUs A10 - 7700k and and A10- 7850k. Some were released in FM2+ sockets, but all were Kaveri parts which IIRC would be going up against Haswell or the Ivy Bridge tick.
But they never released as high performance parts, AM3+ FX parts. They je bated it with the FX 9590 and I think 9370 FX parts.
It's too early to get exited they may axe it still
This monster is the way forward.
DDR6-10000 CUDIMMsAnd without sufficient bandwidth all those cores will go to waste anyway.
This monster is the way forward.
Intel needs to make this happen so AMD can also respond in kind.