Discussion Intel current and future Lakes & Rapids thread

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cortexa99

Senior member
Jul 2, 2018
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I think if everything goes fine Intel might take back the honor which had already achieved with Conroe since 2006.
I'm not old enough but IIRC the situation is very similar if we take a time machine and go back when Conroe fought against K8 after the Prescott being replaced by Yonah in mobile. History seems sometimes repeats itself. But this time might be a lot different since clock compete is over. XD


As for RKL the Z590 price seems out of control......preorder too expensive as double-digit percentage higher than Z490.......
 
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bullzz

Senior member
Jul 12, 2013
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The Xe IGP in this ES ADL seems to be ~1.5x the performance of Xe in TGL, it seems that 10nm problem finally gets a significant fix.
I think if everything goes fine Intel might take back the honor which had already achieved with Conroe since 2006.
I'm not old enough but IIRC the situation is very similar if we take a time machine and go back when Conroe fought against K8 after the Prescott being replaced by Yonah in mobile. History seems sometimes repeats itself. But this time might be a lot different since clock compete is over. XD


As for RKL the Z590 price seems out of control......preorder too expensive as double-digit percentage higher than Z490.......

Where are seeing 1.5x IGP perf increase? Are you referring to openCL from above link?
 

cortexa99

Senior member
Jul 2, 2018
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Where are seeing 1.5x IGP perf increase? Are you referring to openCL from above link?

Sorry I make a terrible mistake, Xe seems do specially great in OpenCL, and I just directly translate the Xe OpenCL performance to graphic performance which is not correct.
 
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mikk

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May 15, 2012
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Some very early geekbench leaks of Alder Lake. It seems that the top mobile version will have 6 big and 8 small cores:

Unfortunately no performance numbers yet.


Interesting to note this sample uses LPDDR4x with a fully enabled GT2 which implies it's a successor of TGL-U rather than CML-H/TGL-H. This is a big increase from 4 to 6+8 cores if this is the case. However they could sell it for both markets as they did with TGL-H35 which is a renamed TGL-UP3. The reported clock speed is also quite impressive for such an early sample.
 
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LikeLinus

Lifer
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Yes is some places, but with 10600KF there is no CPU cooler."Old R5 3600 is bit cheeper+CPU cooler in the box".This is Mindfactory/Germany vs Geizhals/Austria short comparison.




If you look at sales numbers for various i5 10600 models, it looks absurdly vs R5 3600 small 114 000 CPU sold. :mask:


OK, I'm a bit confused. Why are peopled allowed to use random German retailers as some sort of actual metrics, lol, or a data point for real sales?

I've seen people condemn other sites based on their testing, but how is that any worse than using a single retailer as something important??

MindFactory is completely silly and doesn't actually represent a true overall sales point for any product. It's one country, one retailer, and nothing of importance. Seems great when you are trying to make a point, but the reality is that it's a drop in the bucket and doesn't mean anything.

This thread is about Intel, not AMD. I've seen post telling users to "stay on topic" in AMD threads, but I haven't seen anything in this thread or other Intel threads saying the same.

We don't care about "metrics" from some Germany company. They mean very little to the overall metrics.
 
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Hulk

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Oct 9, 1999
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Alder Lake

I understand the primary reason for going with Big/Little cores is for power efficiency but I'm wondering if there is a possibility that the Windows scheduler could be optimized to assign threads to cores based on the workload of the core? If all of the cores have the same amount of compute but the threads don't it seems like such an approach could in effect "balance" thread performance as a whole?

I'm just wondering if there is any validity to this? It seems that a similar effect could be achieved by varying clocks of various cores but of course this could lead to wasted resources or power.

Also do we know anything at all architecturally about the Golden Cove core? I couldn't find anything except 10 to 20% IPC increase over Tiger Lake. Yes, yes, but how do we get there is the question, right? Addition of another decoder and execution port, better OoO scheduling/branch prediction, etc?
 

Bouowmx

Golden Member
Nov 13, 2016
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OK, I'm a bit confused. Why are peopled allowed to use random German retailers as some sort of actual metrics, lol, or a data point for real sales?
Post redated
I understand the primary reason for going with Big/Little cores is for power efficiency but I'm wondering if there is a possibility that the Windows scheduler could be optimized to assign threads to cores based on the workload of the core? If all of the cores have the same amount of compute but the threads don't it seems like such an approach could in effect "balance" thread performance as a whole?
I don't fully understand your question, but see how Android/Linux does it:
init_load_pct




Trolling and inflammatory posts are not allowed.


esquared
Anandtech Forum Director
 
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lobz

Platinum Member
Feb 10, 2017
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OK, I'm a bit confused. Why are peopled allowed to use random German retailers as some sort of actual metrics, lol, or a data point for real sales?

I've seen people condemn other sites based on their testing, but how is that any worse than using a single retailer as something important??

MindFactory is completely silly and doesn't actually represent a true overall sales point for any product. It's one country, one retailer, and nothing of importance. Seems great when you are trying to make a point, but the reality is that it's a drop in the bucket and doesn't mean anything.

This thread is about Intel, not AMD. I've seen post telling users to "stay on topic" in AMD threads, but I haven't seen anything in this thread or other Intel threads saying the same.

We don't care about "metrics" from some Germany company. They mean very little to the overall metrics.
This was an answer to another post that already compared Intel and AMD prices, so it couldn't be off-topic even if you really wanted it to be. Other than that, It's not the actual numbers that are important in the monthly mindfactory reports (which is one of the biggest e-tailers in the biggest economy of Europe), but the trend it shows over the past 5 years. Numbers can be sketchy, but trends are always something to look out for. So no need for you to cry out so loud this time.
 

Hulk

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
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I don't fully understand your question, but see how Android/Linux does it:
Documentation/scheduler/sched-zone.txt - kernel/msm - Git at Google init_load_pct

Yes. That is exactly what I was looking for. After reading this I'm still pondering a few questions.

If you have a high performance CPU, say a Sunny Cove core and it is working on a thread that is not have a lot of "parallelism" meaning instructions that can be executed simultaneously, in order to run the task quickly it would have to be run at a high clock even though many internal resources aren't being utilized. Yes, I realize this is why HT was implemented.

But to my specific question. Is it possible that a high efficiency core could execute this thread described above with the same IPC as the high performance core since much of the high performance core's resources aren't being utilized anyway? This would seem to me to be a big advantage of Alder Lake if this is the case. The HMP Scheduler of course has to be very smart but now we are moving into a realm of dynamically allocating resources based on the capability of various cores available to the scheduler. This is very interesting and exciting. I can't wait to see how Alder Lake performs on various workloads.

I'm sure Intel has run the simulations and has decided the path to the best performance and efficiency for a given number of transistors (die size) is to not only be able to vary frequency per core but also have the ability to move high/low workload threads to high performance or high efficiency cores.
 

yuri69

Senior member
Jul 16, 2013
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Intel surely posses the resources to make even the Windows scheduler work somewhat correctly with Alder Lake.

Due Intel $$$ it won't be the sad show as with AMD x86 stuff like - Bulldozer CMT scheduling, Ryzen CCX scheduling, Ryzen preferred core scheduling, Threadripper MCM-aware scheduling, Threadripper 128 thread issue, etc.

The *worst* case scenario for Alder Lake is to simply disable the "Atom Cores" in BIOS. So you end up with an uniform high-performance 8c processor.
 

lobz

Platinum Member
Feb 10, 2017
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Intel surely posses the resources to make even the Windows scheduler work somewhat correctly with Alder Lake.

Due Intel $$$ it won't be the sad show as with AMD x86 stuff like - Bulldozer CMT scheduling, Ryzen CCX scheduling, Ryzen preferred core scheduling, Threadripper MCM-aware scheduling, Threadripper 128 thread issue, etc.

The *worst* case scenario for Alder Lake is to simply disable the "Atom Cores" in BIOS. So you end up with an uniform high-performance 8c processor.
Regardless of any amount of money or even just making sense, you think FAR-FAR too highly of Microsoft. The conglomerate fails even at the simplest of tasks and makes too much effort to fix non-existent problems, making everything cringe. The only company out there that is even more tone deaf towards consumer demand is Apple, but that was always a very low bar to clear, so... I wouldn't assume anything to be 'fixed' or made ready just because it is suddenly in Intel's interest too. It's really not about that.
 

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
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Regardless of any amount of money or even just making sense, you think FAR-FAR too highly of Microsoft. The conglomerate fails even at the simplest of tasks and makes too much effort to fix non-existent problems, making everything cringe. The only company out there that is even more tone deaf towards consumer demand is Apple, but that was always a very low bar to clear, so... I wouldn't assume anything to be 'fixed' or made ready just because it is suddenly in Intel's interest too. It's really not about that.
You are correct that Microsoft is slow and tone-deaf to many customer's needs.

However, Microsoft has a vested interest in keeping x86 alive. An ARM/Android dominated world could be the final straw for Microsoft. Having a good scheduler is one way for Microsoft to fight back against ARM/Android.

Plus, if I were Microsoft, I would drool over the possibility of dedicated cores to keep the operating system running while the big cores run the software. Think of all the ways they can run those small cores at 100% usage all the time without ever impacting the user!
 
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DrMrLordX

Lifer
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OK, I'm a bit confused. Why are peopled allowed to use random German retailers as some sort of actual metrics, lol, or a data point for real sales?

mindfactory is one of the few retailers that will tell you what they've sold in exacting detail. Amazon has a "best sellers" list but provides no context. mindfactory is a microcosm of the DiY market. It's a case of "some data is better than no data".
 

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
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mindfactory is one of the few retailers that will tell you what they've sold in exacting detail. Amazon has a "best sellers" list but provides no context. mindfactory is a microcosm of the DiY market. It's a case of "some data is better than no data".
It is also the equivalent of looking at Pizza Hut's sales numbers in exacting detail and concluding that hamburgers don't sell well in America. Non-scientific data (such as self-selected DIY buyers from one niche company) is a bad way of understanding the general CPU market. It might help explain the DIY market, but even then it isn't that great. For example Mindfactory can just purposely misprice item X or item Y and suddenly the numbers shift.
 

DrMrLordX

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
21,582
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It is also the equivalent of looking at Pizza Hut's sales numbers in exacting detail and concluding that hamburgers don't sell well in America. Non-scientific data (such as self-selected DIY buyers from one niche company) is a bad way of understanding the general CPU market. It might help explain the DIY market, but even then it isn't that great. For example Mindfactory can just purposely misprice item X or item Y and suddenly the numbers shift.

First off, if Mindfactory "misprices" items, you'll know it from looking at their store listings. Feel free to gather that data if you like.

Secondly, duh? It only tells you where demand is piling up among experienced users, to the extent that mindfactory can fulfill demand (mindfactory's Zen3 sales are probably hampered by short supplies, for example). It's useful for trend analysis among those who actually care about the performance of a CPU. Nobody is trying to sell the idea that mindfactory is a good indicator of OEM sales when OEM buyers routinely pick from a list of CPUs that DiY users would almost never consider (or CPUs that are OEM-only).
 

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
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Nobody is trying to sell the idea that mindfactory is a good indicator of OEM sales when OEM buyers routinely pick from a list of CPUs that DiY users would almost never consider (or CPUs that are OEM-only).
Just search this very thread and forum for "Mindfactory" and you get things like this (from the same person that started it a few posts above):
Look how is that going in real life, or Intel 6/12 vs AMD 6/12 CPU king of today Desktop market.

Intel CPU is cheeper, but hm 99% people buy only R5 3600.[/URL]
Really, 99% of people buy the AMD R5 3600?

The statistics are very accurate, or more precise for the for bigest Geman retailer Mindfactory.As far i now, only Mindfactory shows(über verkauft or sold over)the number of various sold hardwer parts.

- 80% sold CPU are from AMD
Oh, wait, that is 80% of all CPUs are AMD.

Here is another poster.
If it's about sales you can look at Mindfactory data showing AMD outselling Intel 2:1.
Yes, Mindfactory tells us useful information. But we shouldn't generalize it.
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
10,847
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Just search this very thread and forum for "Mindfactory" and you get things like this (from the same person that started it a few posts above):

Really, 99% of people buy the AMD R5 3600?


Oh, wait, that is 80% of all CPUs are AMD.

Here is another poster.

Yes, Mindfactory tells us useful information. But we shouldn't generalize it.

During pre Zen era roughly 90% of the CPU sold by mindfactory were Intel, you can eventually find the numbers here or there, so their statistics are very accurate as a representative sample of the the european DIY market, as an exmple here are the sales of some previous Intel CPUs that are still in their offerings :



For S1151 the best sellers was actually the 7700K.
 

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
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so their statistics are very accurate as a representative sample of the the european DIY market, as an exmple here are the sales of some previous Intel CPUs that are still in their offerings
The dispute is when people talk about general CPU sales using DIY Mindfactory data. That is vastly different from DIY data.
 

Hitman928

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Apr 15, 2012
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Except STEAM data.

Steam data methodology is unknown. We know exactly how Mindfactory gets its numbers. I agree Mindfactory numbers should be used carefully and the source of the numbers understood and we shouldn't be trying to extrapolate beyond Mindfactory's market, but at least we know how the numbers are generated. Even steam numbers I think have some value but should not be used at face value or as an accurate representation of market share numbers at any given period of time.
 
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lobz

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It is also the equivalent of looking at Pizza Hut's sales numbers in exacting detail and concluding that hamburgers don't sell well in America. Non-scientific data (such as self-selected DIY buyers from one niche company) is a bad way of understanding the general CPU market. It might help explain the DIY market, but even then it isn't that great. For example Mindfactory can just purposely misprice item X or item Y and suddenly the numbers shift.
That's a very bad analogue. Mindfactory covers the same market as other retailers. Pizza hut really does not. Also, suggesting a purposeful mispricing over this time frame is just grasping at imaginary straws, because it's also possible that they're purposefully selling Intel products and re-labelling them as AMD products both are possible and extremely unlikely.
 
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Ajay

Lifer
Jan 8, 2001
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Oh geez. Mindfactory 'data' is representative of Mindfactory customers only. Just because it's all we have doesn't make it statistically valuable.
Quote the numbers for 10 top retailers in 10 top markets and I might give a nod that that would represent useful data, otherwise, raspberries.

This is just such a ridiculous argument to have, I wish it would end.
 
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