ShintaiDK
Lifer
- Apr 22, 2012
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Thats roughly 6 cores of work there, looks to scale bad if you dont have a bottleneck somewhere
Yes, because they added more CPU cores and an iGPU. See this picture of the Ivy Bridge (and Sandy Bridge) CPU die layout:Compare a Core 2 core to an IB core. And you see it has grown quite alot.
It's not about that at all. But maybe you want to turn it in that direction?This thread is starting to look like the classic: X company is evil because they wont give me something nobody else needs, and I wont pay for the items in the segment that offers it.
Both Intel and AMD is going this route for a reason.
If you want to complain about lack of 8 cores etc. Then blame software companies.
Actually not true. Recently AMD has been going for more cores, but Intel hasn't. And yeah, I know AMDs 8 core chips do not have 8 "true" CPU cores, but still.
And you compare SB with IB cores in size? I told you to compare Conroe with IB. How many transistors does a Conroe core use? And an IB core?
Thats roughly 6 cores of work there, looks to scale bad if you dont have a bottleneck somewhere![]()
I just happened to take the screenshot when the cores weren`t at 100%.
You do know AMDs future bet is 2 modules/4 threads APUs? AM3+ platform gets one last CPU with 4 modules/8 threads and thats it. No more there, deadend.
AMD is going for less cores and more iGPU in the future.
You do know AMDs future bet is 2 modules/4 threads APUs? AM3+ platform gets one last CPU with 4 modules/8 threads and thats it. No more there, deadend.
AMD is going for less cores and more iGPU in the future.
Can it be assumed they they're also looking into higher IPC, or is the iGPU their only concern?
The answer is Nehalem in early 2010....
What kind of question is this? The processor already exists and has for over 2 years.
a tiny, tiny, tiny fraction of a percent of home users would actually utilize more than 4 cores today.
I can't stress how tiny that fraction of a percent is.
So wouldn't it be reasonable to assume that at least half of the 4 times amount of transistors will be consumed by additional cores?
For quite some time the CPU performance increases between CPU generations have been modest and evolutionary. The latest significant leap was going from Netburst(P4) -> Conroe(C2D).
Focus on Ivy Bridge & Haswell seems to be to improve Ultrabook power consumption / battery life / iGPU performance. So when can we expect the next major leap? I guess it would mean Intel providing 8 core mainstream CPUs? Clearly that will not happen with Haswell. So will we have to wait until Broadwell, Skylake, Skymont, or beyond? Has anything been communicated by Intel?
Absolutely. dinker99's bad multi-core scaling is a result of the lack of support for hardware transactional memory and lock elision, not bad software design. More cores could even lead to lower performance due to the overhead of handling quadratically more interactions between cores/threads. So we need TSX first to lower the overhead and facilitate the programming, before it makes sense to have more cores.So couldn't the introduction of TSX be a sign that Intel is preparing for more cores in later CPU generations?
Both those application will benefit from AVX2's double vector throughput just as much as from doubling the number of cores, if not more.3ds Max mental ray and After Effects can certainly make quite good use of an n-core system. Unfortunately, I don't have money to upgrade to anything beyond 4 cores.
Today's CPU's blow away previous generations in every regard except for one. And that is real world software that actually uses all that processing power. For example for gaming, there is a lot of evidence to support the idea that going above a 2500K is a waste of money as the 2500K is good enough for any game out there when used with the appropriate GPU.
No, Haswell's AVX2 doubles the throughput per core, and its TSX extension prepares for more cores in the future.And so the plan is that games will just stagnate where they are now? We've hit the limit??
First off, Intel already has 8 core processors available in servers. So the have the technology and could theoretically bring that to the desktop (probably at a high price though) any time they want...if there were demand for it.
If there was no demand for CPUs that perform well in multi-threaded scenarios, then how come Intel 3770K is selling well? If there was no demand for it then everyone would just be getting the 3570K instead.
I know 3770K only has Hyper-Threading support and not 8 "true" CPU cores, but still the point is that it only performs better than 3570K in multi-threaded scenarios (apart from some minor frequency difference). And there's clearly a demand for it, since the 3770K is selling well...
Sorry, no. You want 8 Intel cores, just buy a Xeon, there have been 8 core (+HT) models available for almost two and a half years. The product is available.
Those are not mainstream CPUs, which is the topic for this thread. Most people are not prepared to pay an "Xeon-price tag" to have 8 cores. If there was only a $100 difference to get 8 cores, things would be different...
The 100 Mhz translates to a 100 Mhz/3400 Mhz = 3% performance increase. Do you really think that's why people are prepared to pay $100 more?The 3770K is a 100Mhz speedbin + 2MB cache and thats why.
We're back to the chicken and egg scenario again. And no, we don't have mainstream CPUs that are capable of 8 "true" cores/threads.We already got CPUs capable of all those threads. Its software that lacks.
The problem is that SW is optimized for the current mainstream Intel CPUs, which accounts for 80-90% of the market. Currently that means 4 true cores. So there is no point for AMD to lead the way and introduce 8 cores on it's own, since SW won't follow until the mainstream Intel CPUs have 8 cores as well. Also, note that AMD is one node shrink behind Intel, so they only have 50% the amount of transistors per die area which makes it harder for them to introduce true 8 core CPUs (they have to consider iGPU and TDP as well to match Intel).AMD also burned its fingers in that game. Their result was basicly just idle cores in CPUs that added extra costs and limits. And now they change back to 4 threads max.
