[Deustche Bank Conference] AMD's New x86 Core is Zen, WIll Launch WIth K12

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mrmt

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2012
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You're right, it probably won't be. Which is part of the problem - where is the volume going to come?

Embedded/semi-custom. I think the issue is not whether AMD can get volumes or not, but whether they can generate enough cash inflow in a time frame tight enough to support a bleeding edge pipeline. And I think th answer to this question is no.
 

mrmt

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2012
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And why would I "remember" this? If I was on my knees all day long blowing Intel left and right, gobbling up quotes, maybe, but instead there are enthusiasts out there that actually use the hardware that suits their needs. You compare Intel processors to AMD's that cost 2-3x as much. They aren't even close to the same price range.

Did you ever build a server? I'm asking this because once in servers, and Shintai was referring specifically to Xeon, the price that the middle class can pay is not the issue (I love this unionist cliché, it's like back 50 years into the past), but TCO is, and for some cases even if AMD were to give its Opteron chips for free it wouldn't make sense to use AMD over Intel processors.
 
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CHADBOGA

Platinum Member
Mar 31, 2009
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And why would I "remember" this? If I was on my knees all day long blowing Intel left and right, gobbling up quotes, maybe, but instead there are enthusiasts out there that actually use the hardware that suits their needs. You compare Intel processors to AMD's that cost 2-3x as much. They aren't even close to the same price range.

But hey, when you know that I see that you newly learned buzzwords like uarch and regurgitate the same sentences over and over, you must think you're pretty smart, right?

You have AMD spokesmen effectively confirming Shintai's considered opinions.
 

Enigmoid

Platinum Member
Sep 27, 2012
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Who s talking of servers.?.

Servers are a good indicator of efficiency optimized chips. You still haven't addressed the fact that you are looking at an efficiency part vs. a performance part.

Theses are products that are direct DT competitors on MT tasks performance as sell as in price, so the comparison is relevant.

Pricing is irrelevant to technical merit. AMD doesn't want to sell so low. Intel could sell lower and make a profit. If you want to compare architectures you must compare the fully enabled chips either the performance variants (4770k vs. 8350/8370) or low power variants ( 8370E vs T or S variant i7).

You should read what i wrote, in 7zip and Winrar the 8370E has better perf/watt by the virtue of its 26% better score in this application, in Handbrake and X264 the 4670K take the lead by 10-20% if there s AVX2 optimisations.

If Fritz is horrible as chess game bench then the two other chess games benches are even more horrible, particularly Houdini wich get a 19% boost with HW, as the FX has better perf/watt than in Fritz compared to said 4670K, Stockfish is optimised for both uarch with two different exe files and show about the same thing as Houdini in respect of Fritz where the 4670K has 6% better perf.

<snip>

http://www.hardware.fr/focus/99/amd-fx-8370e-fx-8-coeurs-95-watts-test.html

It looks like it depends where you are getting the bench.

You can search around but any gains are likely due to other factors. If AMD was that close to intel they would have no trouble competing in the server market. If you look at mobile (a 4700mq will outperform a 4670k in MT generally) where intel fits in a 35W TDP (35W quad) demolishes anything AMD can fit in a notebook by more than a factor of two; you generally have go to the desktop 6xxx series to get close as FM2+ simply can't compete.

The 8370E is a step forward. Its good to see that. But if you undervolt/underclock both chips to a set power consumption the 4670k/4770k will step ahead.
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
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Servers are a good indicator of efficiency optimized chips. You still haven't addressed the fact that you are looking at an efficiency part vs. a performance part.

We have numbers expressed in watts in the review i posted while you re relying in a general argument that has no technical basis.

Besides FX8370E is not only efficient it s also a performance part.

Pricing is irrelevant to technical merit. AMD doesn't want to sell so low. Intel could sell lower and make a profit. If you want to compare architectures you must compare the fully enabled chips either the performance variants (4770k vs. 8350/8370) or low power variants ( 8370E vs T or S variant i7).

If price was irrelevant then the i7 would sell more than the i5 and the FX8370 is not that lowly priced, you perfectly know that its the price/perf that is the real comparison since we are in a same usage, that is DT.

It looks like it depends where you are getting the bench.

As you can check, Hfr benches are the most standard ones, not that 7 zip, 3ds Max or Fritz are rarely used, but it s usual for some to negate benches scores once the result doesnt suit their opinion, yet you did ask for softs like 7zip when i started with Fritz, now it s the whole suite that is no more relevant.

You can search around but any gains are likely due to other factors. If AMD was that close to intel they would have no trouble competing in the server market. If you look at mobile (a 4700mq will outperform a 4670k in MT generally) where intel fits in a 35W TDP (35W quad) demolishes anything AMD can fit in a notebook by more than a factor of two; you generally have go to the desktop 6xxx series to get close as FM2+ simply can't compete.

The gains in power efficency were due to better binning and are easily understood when reading the review i linked, as for the 4700mq it was measured at 86W in a minimalist test plateform by Anand, get more serious numbers than branding a TDP wich is known to be fraction of the actualy consumed power, keep on computing its perfs watts based on a flawed number, i guess that its like the core M wich consume only 4.5W set appart when it sucks 15W, that is using 4.5W for the perfs/watt calculations of scores made at 15W TDP.


The 8370E is a step forward. Its good to see that. But if you undervolt/underclock both chips to a set power consumption the 4670k/4770k will step ahead.

It s not all to reduce the voltage you must guarantee full stability, if Intel doesnt reduce the voltage more then it means that they wont risk instability for the sake of a few watts, so you re still searching around i see...
 

AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
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If AMD was that close to intel they would have no trouble competing in the server market.

Performance and efficiency was not the problem for 6300 series Opterons.


If you look at mobile (a 4700mq will outperform a 4670k in MT generally) where intel fits in a 35W TDP (35W quad) demolishes anything AMD can fit in a notebook by more than a factor of two; you generally have go to the desktop 6xxx series to get close as FM2+ simply can't compete.

FM2+ APUs can easily compete against Haswell Core i3. An 8-core SR CPU could easily compete(performance wise) against 4C 8T Haswell CPUs.

The 8370E is a step forward. Its good to see that. But if you undervolt/underclock both chips to a set power consumption the 4670k/4770k will step ahead.

Well one is made at 32nm Gate-First PD-SOI when the other is made with 22nm FinFet. Im sure you would have the exact opposite results if FX8350 was made at Intels 22nm FF and Haswell at GlobalFoundries 32nm Gate-First.
If we want to compare at the technical level, just compare Intel Core i7 3820 (32nm server part) to FX8350 (32nm Server part) and see how those two behave. Those two are the closest SKUs technically.
 

Sweepr

Diamond Member
May 12, 2006
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i guess that its like the core M wich consume only 4.5W set appart when it sucks 15W, that is using 4.5W for the perfs/watt calculations of scores made at 15W TDP.

Let me educate you.

Speaking of heat generation, Intel mentioned that OEMs have the option to configure all Core M processors to one of three TDP targets: 3 Watts, 4.5 Watts, or 6 Watts. This is to allow manufacturers to cater products for specific use-case scenarios. For instance, the top of the line Core M 5Y70 could be limited to a 3 Watt TDP in a product designed for maximum battery life. On the other hand, an enclosure with active cooling might support a 6 Watt TDP and provide a snappier response (to clarify, a 6 Watt solution wouldn't necessarily require a fan, a thicker enclosure with better heat dissipation would also do the trick).

This brings us to the final element of Intel&#8217;s power optimization efforts, which involve further adjustments to turbo boost as part of Intel&#8217;s &#8220;hurry up and go to sleep&#8221; motto. New for Broadwell-Y is a 3rd power state, PL3, which allows for even greater turbo boosting, but for only a very limited period of time &#8211; on the order of milliseconds. PL3 represents the maximum amount of power the device battery can deliver, and while it&#8217;s okay to reach this value sparingly, PL3 is a fast drain that is very hard on the battery. The existence of PL3 in this case is as much for battery protection as it is for performance; it allows devices to tap into PL3 power levels on occasion, all the while allowing PL2 (the regular burst limit) to be defined at a safer value below the battery&#8217;s limit. Put another way, by knowing PL3 devices know how to stay farther away from it, which in the long run is what&#8217;s best for battery reliability.

The PL3 boost state allows the most amount of power that won't damage the system's battery, used for very short spikes as needed - the kind of time spans that are measured in milliseconds. PL2 is the standard burst limit, and PL1 represents the long-term system limit of sustainable power delivery.

See, can you stop spreading lies and mentioning Intel in an AMD thread now?
 
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Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
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Let me educate you.

You manage to keep serious while writing this..??

The quotes you posted doesnt tell the story, use google translate
and read this article if you want to understandand something to the new power management scheme you re trying to explain :

http://www.hardware.fr/news/13889/idf-tdp-complique-core-m.html

See, can you stop spreading lies and mentioning Intel in an AMD thread now?

Also you should be more cautious before branding other liars, using deffamation is just aknowledgment of your lack of arguments, i m looking at things technicaly speaking not on a marketing point of view like you seems to do, what i discuss are real numbers not hollow sentences sparsed with theorical numbers whose experience and test benches have proved that they are only marketing monikers.

Besides why not talking of Intel since we re comparing CPUs and TDP definitions of thoses CPUs wich are directly competing products.??.
 

Sweepr

Diamond Member
May 12, 2006
5,148
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what i discuss are real numbers not hollow sentences sparsed with theorical numbers whose experience and test benches have proved that they are only marketing monikers.

Can you please provide the tests/benchmarks confirming Core M constantly uses 15W during benchmarks? Also feel free to explain how they're able to fit the imaginary 15W TDP Broadwell-Y in a fanless 7mm thick 10 / 12.5'' package. I'll be waiting.
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
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Can you please provide the tests/benchmarks confirming Core M constantly uses 15W during benchmarks? Also feel free to explain how they're able to fit the imaginary 15W TDP Broadwell-Y in a fanless 7mm thick 10 / 12.5'' chassis. I'll be waiting.


That s not the thread but well, i ll answer to this point since Shintaidk is saying the same thing as you although on a more direct and less lenghty manner.

It s true that TDP can reach 15W only during 10ms but what if the duty rate is 90%..?

What if i let only 1ms duration before each 10ms pulses as was likely the case when CB11.5 was benched.?

The CPU will reach 90% of its peak 15W TDP, let say 12W during 30 seconds for our exemple, but if your cooling apparatus has enough thermal inertia and that the subsequant power usage is say 2W then you can integrate the power usage over a period of 2mn30s wich will yield 4W power usage averaged on this period, that s how TDP is estimated in these new power management schemes, the thermal inertia of the whole device is used as some reserve where you can borrow excess power that will be paid back later when a lower power usage will allow it.

We dont know if AMD is using this kind of PM, what is sure is that Mullins is limited to about 1.5Ghz when fully loaded, estimations are not easy as it could be at 4.5W as well as at 6.5W at such a frequency, so far there has been no accurate numbers which would allow for 10% precision estimation.
 
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Enigmoid

Platinum Member
Sep 27, 2012
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Performance and efficiency was not the problem for 6300 series Opterons.

What is then? Cause they ain't selling.

FM2+ APUs can easily compete against Haswell Core i3. An 8-core SR CPU could easily compete(performance wise) against 4C 8T Haswell CPUs.

Mobile?

Well one is made at 32nm Gate-First PD-SOI when the other is made with 22nm FinFet. Im sure you would have the exact opposite results if FX8350 was made at Intels 22nm FF and Haswell at GlobalFoundries 32nm Gate-First.
If we want to compare at the technical level, just compare Intel Core i7 3820 (32nm server part) to FX8350 (32nm Server part) and see how those two behave. Those two are the closest SKUs technically.

The top 8350 (server part) is the 6328 which runs at 3.2/3.8 at 115W and at $~575. Not sure why you are comparing to the 3820 in servers when the competing part would be the E3 Xeon series. Unless you need the quad channel RAM or the 40 PCI-E lanes. But for a simple box (1P system) that would be the competition.

Even in AT's Haswell EP article they mention that the 6300 series isn't competitive vs. sandy bridge.

We have numbers expressed in watts in the review i posted while you re relying in a general argument that has no technical basis.

Besides FX8370E is not only efficient it s also a performance part.

Sure, but its a low power chip (hence the E).

If price was irrelevant then the i7 would sell more than the i5 and the FX8370 is not that lowly priced, you perfectly know that its the price/perf that is the real comparison since we are in a same usage, that is DT.

It costs intel the exact same to build an i5 as an i7. All things equal it possibly costs intel less to build a 4770k die than it does AMD to make a 8350 die. Take your interest as a consumer and stand back from the problem. Evaluating a product on purely technical merit includes the performance characteristics of the product and the price it costs to build. It has nothing to do with the price it sells at because a superior product will command a better price.

As you can check, Hfr benches are the most standard ones, not that 7 zip, 3ds Max or Fritz are rarely used, but it s usual for some to negate benches scores once the result doesnt suit their opinion, yet you did ask for softs like 7zip when i started with Fritz, now it s the whole suite that is no more relevant.

7-zip is fine. Fritz suffers from many of the same problems as 3d-PM, namely that there is a massive loss of performance between PII and the construction cores.
PII x4 980 = 9009 points
a10-7850k = 7563 points

PII is 20% faster clock for clock.


The gains in power efficency were due to better binning and are easily understood when reading the review i linked, as for the 4700mq it was measured at 86W in a minimalist test plateform by Anand, get more serious numbers than branding a TDP wich is known to be fraction of the actualy consumed power, keep on computing its perfs watts based on a flawed number, i guess that its like the core M wich consume only 4.5W set appart when it sucks 15W, that is using 4.5W for the perfs/watt calculations of scores made at 15W TDP.

When you actually look at the tests you see that the systems are not configured the same.

http://techreport.com/review/24879/intel-core-i7-4770k-and-4950hq-haswell-processors-reviewed/7

Idle power is 12W higher (37W) on the mobile platform because its not a production platform with power optimizations. Also that is a most power hungry SKU. A 4700mq will draw substantially less (without edram as well).

It s not all to reduce the voltage you must guarantee full stability, if Intel doesnt reduce the voltage more then it means that they wont risk instability for the sake of a few watts, so you re still searching around i see...

Yes, but intel (and AMD) generally seem to have a lot of extra volts. This may be the reason why Core M is hitting those speeds.
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
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7-zip is fine. Fritz suffers from many of the same problems as 3d-PM, namely that there is a massive loss of performance between PII and the construction cores.
PII x4 980 = 9009 points
a10-7850k = 7563 points

PII is 20% faster clock for clock.

So it s not a bench favourable to the FX but it is more to Haswell since it has 12% better score than a C2D so what would be its irrelevancy.?.That it favour not enough the Intel chips.?.

You noticed that there s two other chess game benches to ponder this one, just that the FX seems to appreciate them more than it does for Fritz...


http://techreport.com/review/24879/intel-core-i7-4770k-and-4950hq-haswell-processors-reviewed/7[/URL]

Idle power is 12W higher (37W) on the mobile platform because its not a production platform with power optimizations. Also that is a most power hungry SKU. A 4700mq will draw substantially less (without edram as well).

Idle power will be reduced but not the 55W delta, also they say 92W peak power while the graph show that peaks are above 100W and that the averaged power is more 95W than 92W, i guess that they wanted to be sympathetic to the CPU provider.

Yes, but intel (and AMD) generally seem to have a lot of extra volts. This may be the reason why Core M is hitting those speeds.

Intel is more agressive in matter of binning given their bigger production, for AMD it doesnt make sense economicaly to fine grain the binning more than they currently are as there would be risk to not produce enough of scarce anyway parts to just recoup the increased costs of binnings and inventories.
 

AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
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What is then? Cause they ain't selling.

Lack of MG&A at the time of release. AMD was in its biggest transformation process in 2012.


Kaveri mobile is doing fine against mobile Core i3/5 Haswell even at low TDPs.



The top 8350 (server part) is the 6328 which runs at 3.2/3.8 at 115W and at $~575. Not sure why you are comparing to the 3820 in servers when the competing part would be the E3 Xeon series. Unless you need the quad channel RAM or the 40 PCI-E lanes. But for a simple box (1P system) that would be the competition.

Even in AT's Haswell EP article they mention that the 6300 series isn't competitive vs. sandy bridge.

I meant that if you want to talk technically, then you have to compare FX8350 which is a server part against Core i7 3820 that is again derived from a server part. Both have large L2/L3 caches and 40 PCI-e lanes with 6x or more SATA-3 etc.

For server SKUs you have to compare Opteron 6328 115W TDP (same die as FX8350) against Xeon E5-2643 130W TDP (same die as Core i7 3820)


All things equal it possibly costs intel less to build a 4770k die than it does AMD to make a 8350 die.

Without knowing the wafer price and yields, die size alone doesnt mean anything.
 
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Enigmoid

Platinum Member
Sep 27, 2012
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So it s not a bench favourable to the FX but it is more to Haswell since it has 12% better score than a C2D so what would be its irrelevancy.?.That it favour not enough the Intel chips.?.

There are certain benchmarks that are very poor and some that are okay. Some are also good. An ideal benchmark will not show undue gains or losses due to architecture. It should not be unduly above or below the average performance gains on a variety of applications.

Fritz is a little weird. If you take haswell and compare it to the baseline P3 @ 1 Ghz (480 Kilonodes) you see that haswell has about 57% more IPC.

i5-4430 = 9023 points / 4C /3Ghz = 752/480 = 157%

Its a terrible benchmark that is no indication of modern processor performance.
Also about hardware fr. I don't know if its the motherboards or what but just looking at the SB -> HW generation idle powers are higher (what on earth) and the peak powers are nearly identical. Their power numbers are weird and different from everyone else.

You noticed that there s two other chess game benches to ponder this one, just that the FX seems to appreciate them more than it does for Fritz...

As long as the benchmark is updated that is fine. But if you examine it and find its not then there is a problem.
I'm not sure about houdini but here are some publisher benchmarks.

http://www.cruxis.com/chess/manual/index.html

Doesn't seem like much scaling between lynfield and ivybridge once you take the clockspeed difference into account.

Idle power will be reduced but not the 55W delta, also they say 92W peak power while the graph show that peaks are above 100W and that the averaged power is more 95W than 92W, i guess that they wanted to be sympathetic to the CPU provider.

Please, they aren't biased, they are taking the average. Dropping 12W brings the average to 80W which is still high for a notebook but reasonable. Lets also not forget that I was taking about lower power level chips (4700mq), the 4950hq is, on average the same as the 8350 and faster than the 8370E.

Lack of MG&A at the time of release. AMD was in its biggest transformation process in 2012.

Yeah, okay :whiste:
Kaveri mobile is doing fine against mobile Core i3/5 Haswell even at low TDPs.

The CPU gets destroyed against the 35W competition. The GPU is good but it can't stand against a 35W dual let alone a 35W quad.

I meant that if you want to talk technically, then you have to compare FX8350 which is a server part against Core i7 3820 that is again derived from a server part. Both have large L2/L3 caches and 40 PCI-e lanes with 6x or more SATA-3 etc.

While true these only matter if they are going to be used. Cache only matters if it helps performance. For a lot of workstations LGA 1155 is sufficient unless you are running a ton of expansion cards or SSDs, even among workstations this is relatively uncommon. If your specific case requires it then you are 100% correct if it doesn't then why spend money. This is the same argument you see people trying to build an equivalently priced imac to hackentosh and someone insists on a thunderbolt capable motherboard even though very few use thunderbolt.

For server SKUs you have to compare Opteron 6328 115W TDP (same die as FX8350) against Xeon E5-2643 130W TDP (same die as Core i7 3820)

The 6328 runs at lower clocks than the 8350. Sure you can compare it to the E5 but the E5-2643 is about 4x more ($884 vs. 215) than the E3-1230 and has identical CPU performance. Sure it has more lanes, cache and I/O but nobody is going to buy it over the E3 unless they need those lanes, etc.

Without knowing the wafer price and yields, die size alone doesn't mean anything.

Which is why I said probably. They are both fairly mature now and 22nm greater (likely) cost is balanced by the fact that intel doesn't pay foundry margins.

Going forward Zen looks to (probably) take the jaguar core and scale it up. For that reason it is unlikely it is a terribly high performance high frequency product but rather focuses on cost and efficiency. Smaller core sizes and greater cache efficiency are important in the server market. IPC will increase not doubt about that (given how jaguar is almost clock for clock as strong as steamroller). But AMD doesn't have a terribly large budget and the amount of time spent on this product is less than BD so as mentioned before the scope and breadth of zen is probably going to be smaller than expected. In my opinion it will likely recycle parts of jaguar and PII and take design cues from the construction cores.

AMD has to play to their strengths to win.
 

mrmt

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2012
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The 6328 runs at lower clocks than the 8350. Sure you can compare it to the E5 but the E5-2643 is about 4x more ($884 vs. 215) than the E3-1230 and has identical CPU performance. Sure it has more lanes, cache and I/O but nobody is going to buy it over the E3 unless they need those lanes, etc.

This is a red herring, this is a variant of the same argumentation John Fruehe used to write about on his blogs when he was tap-dancing about the value of AMD server offers. As AMD market share now shows, the argument was flawed to the bone.

Xeon E5-2643 exists for the cases you have workloads that needs tons of single thread performance but at the same time you require tons of PCIe lanes, which means core count aren't a priority. It's a niche SKU in the first place. But what if your workload is more typical for server environments, e.g., core scale matters a lot for you? Then we are talking about packing more cores for the two sockets, meaning that you won't take the 4C Xeon, but likely the 6C or the 8C versions. That is the Opteron competition, that is the performance/watt it must beat and it doesn't.

The fact is, at 32nm Intel can build a 8C/16T Xeon chip that can sustain high clocks, AMD can't, their 16T chips have to pay a huge penalty in clock speed in order to achieve a reasonable TDP. In order to counter that you must go 4P with AMD to reach the performance of Intel 2P servers, and that's bad for TCO. For specific cases AMD would have to pay you to use their servers instead of Intel-powered chips. This is why Bulldozer is a failure on servers, anything else is a smoke screen.
 

Cerb

Elite Member
Aug 26, 2000
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And why would I "remember" this? If I was on my knees all day long blowing Intel left and right, gobbling up quotes, maybe, but instead there are enthusiasts out there that actually use the hardware that suits their needs. You compare Intel processors to AMD's that cost 2-3x as much. They aren't even close to the same price range.
That 1-2x cost difference is probably made up for within a few months of running it, if not within the first month. When they had a good product, lower prices made people used to one system willing to switch. IE, going from Netburst or Core 2 type Xeons to Opterons, instead of just buying whatever their Dell rep was pushing that day. If that's not the case, it barely does any good, except to show that they are desperate for sales. ShintaiDK is spot on, there: they could, and still can, barely give them away.

A very small number of users will be doing things that require lots of RAM per socket at modest costs, and/or have work limited primarily by threads*clocks, and have them under load often (so idle won't make much difference). For everyone else, upfront CPU costs are a very small part of their server buying decisions, and not a big part of the total cost. Power almost always matters, and sometimes performance does. Spending another $3k per server, FI, if you need a beefier CPU, is not much, when any server taking a full-depth U or more is going to cost you in the tens of thousands just have to have in the rack and powered for 3-5 years.
 

Cerb

Elite Member
Aug 26, 2000
17,484
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FM2+ APUs can easily compete against Haswell Core i3. An 8-core SR CPU could easily compete(performance wise) against 4C 8T Haswell CPUs.
Only at unusual clock speeds. At those they are typically sold at, they cannot. The advantage AMD has against an i3, though, is that CPU performance is only an issue for folks that post here, wanting maximized performance on a budget. Enough software is sufficiently well multithreaded now that 2(C/M)4T is tangibly superior to 1(C/M)2T or 2(C/M)2T, even to regular users. OEMs realize this, and are putting Kaveris where they had fast Pentiums and slow i3s, even in notebooks.

But, at regular prices and performance levels, Intel can easily sell an i5 for more than an FX-8xxx chip, because it's better, all things considered. Ditto for i7. If they really could compete, they would, and either AMD's prices would be higher, or Intel's lower.

Well one is made at 32nm Gate-First PD-SOI when the other is made with 22nm FinFet. Im sure you would have the exact opposite results if FX8350 was made at Intels 22nm FF and Haswell at GlobalFoundries 32nm Gate-First.
AMD has to live with a lagging process. That is not a suitable excuse for performance metrics of their processors. AMD failed against their own prior CPUs. Meanwhile, they have been competitive, even with inferior processes, here in 2014, with Jaguar and Kaveri (Intel isn't shivering in fear, or anything, but OEMs clearly like the chips). They've done what they can to make lemonade from lemons, but take off your fanboy glasses: they made lemons. I was hoping for BD to be better, myself, but it wasn't. Even as it has improved, it has remained too little too late.

With restricted R&D, and ignoring some markets at first, the very good Bobcat was a fair success, but not what it could have been, and the same with Jaguar. If they can lead, rather than follow, markets, with whatever they have coming out, and they are making sensible designs (speed demons need to stay back in the 90s!), they may have some hope. IMO, they really need to follow Qualcomm, and work directly with companies that may implement their products, to both come up with compelling products, and be able to sell a predictably good amount of them.

The 6328 runs at lower clocks than the 8350. Sure you can compare it to the E5 but the E5-2643 is about 4x more ($884 vs. 215) than the E3-1230 and has identical CPU performance. Sure it has more lanes, cache and I/O but nobody is going to buy it over the E3 unless they need those lanes, etc.
Sure they are. The E3 is a desktop socket. If you're buying a server or workstation not using the desktop socket, you won't get to buy desktop CPUs. If you're buying a cheap one using desktop CPUs, you're stuck with a 32GB RAM limit, and inferior ECC.
 

AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
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Only at unusual clock speeds. At those they are typically sold at, they cannot.

SteamRoller Modules can easily compete in MT loads even on Clock to Clock against Haswell 2C 4T CPUs.

But, at regular prices and performance levels, Intel can easily sell an i5 for more than an FX-8xxx chip, because it's better, all things considered. Ditto for i7. If they really could compete, they would, and either AMD's prices would be higher, or Intel's lower.

If i5 Haswell at 22nm FF wasn't better than two year old 32nm FX, then there would be a serious problem for Intel. ;)
And still there are workloads that FX is still faster than any i5 today.