IntelUser2000
Elite Member
- Oct 14, 2003
- 8,660
- 3,755
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Let's get two things clear people. Maybe you don't believe Intel, but you prefer to believe from AdoredTV? Bolded points will address the leaks from Intel and their presentations.
384EUs are from Intel drivers. Nothing is more of a leak than that. WCCFTech may have decent sources sometimes but their conclusions are less accurate. ARL 6x4x16 is pretty clear. So they'd use the abbreviation from Arrowlake but it's actually for DG2? How does that make any sense? All the speculations, guessing, and thinking stops the moment the company itself speaks.
Meteorlake has I/O tile, Compute Tile, Graphics Tile, and SoC Tile. End of story. No need to argue about whether it makes sense to separate the SoC and I/O since they are doing it. And if they are using Foveros for Meteorlake, then it's pretty logical to conclude the Base is passive.
Second, we know already Xe is behind the state-of-the art from Nvidia and AMD. Nvidia beats the Xe with less compute and RDNA2 680M is pretty good, not to mention the old Vega 8 was pretty competitive with it.
So, while Xe could beat Vega 8 at 25W power envelopes, if we go below 20W Vega 8 pulls ahead.
Third, you are assuming Intel will perfect scaling up on the first try. They've never done it successfully before. Even the Skylake Iris Pro was pretty disappointing.
Meteorlake is a 2023-2024 part. H2 2023 might as well be a 2024 release, because it might spend more time in 2024 than in 2023. Where's the advantage of disaggregation if it takes the same time as before to bring new uarchs? Just stick to monolithic then.
Most of us expect DG2 is probably going to be perf/$ competitive. I'd challenge you to find a person that says the architecture in DG2 is on par with RDNA2 and Ampere.
384EUs are from Intel drivers. Nothing is more of a leak than that. WCCFTech may have decent sources sometimes but their conclusions are less accurate. ARL 6x4x16 is pretty clear. So they'd use the abbreviation from Arrowlake but it's actually for DG2? How does that make any sense? All the speculations, guessing, and thinking stops the moment the company itself speaks.
Meteorlake has I/O tile, Compute Tile, Graphics Tile, and SoC Tile. End of story. No need to argue about whether it makes sense to separate the SoC and I/O since they are doing it. And if they are using Foveros for Meteorlake, then it's pretty logical to conclude the Base is passive.
First, you are assuming that they haven't changed their plans. Looks like from the recent info they have ripped their roadmap apart and rebuilt it.Where do you see this? The graphics driver clearly lists both MTL+ARL as either Xe HPG or Gen12.7 and both is DG2 generation. DG3 is Xe2 or Gen12.9 which is coming in the Lunar Lake generation. And how you can say DG2 isn't particularly competitive when it isn't out yet and you can't know how it exactly performs and how much power it needs?
Second, we know already Xe is behind the state-of-the art from Nvidia and AMD. Nvidia beats the Xe with less compute and RDNA2 680M is pretty good, not to mention the old Vega 8 was pretty competitive with it.
So, while Xe could beat Vega 8 at 25W power envelopes, if we go below 20W Vega 8 pulls ahead.
Third, you are assuming Intel will perfect scaling up on the first try. They've never done it successfully before. Even the Skylake Iris Pro was pretty disappointing.
Meteorlake is a 2023-2024 part. H2 2023 might as well be a 2024 release, because it might spend more time in 2024 than in 2023. Where's the advantage of disaggregation if it takes the same time as before to bring new uarchs? Just stick to monolithic then.
Most of us expect DG2 is probably going to be perf/$ competitive. I'd challenge you to find a person that says the architecture in DG2 is on par with RDNA2 and Ampere.
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