dullard
Elite Member
- May 21, 2001
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That is an awful lot of probably false assumptions there.Reminds of a now famous Blizzard employee quote: "Do you guys not have phones?".
There's a number of forum users here that consider the MT performance of the hybrid solution will come with a price in performance consistency. As long as 6+0 or 8+0 SKUs are available, they would rather avoid paying for the E-cores considering their workloads fit P-cores better. Some would obviously like their chips unlocked to push P-cores further.
1) You are downplaying the performance gain of having the E cores.
2) You are ignoring the benefits of having background threads not take up resources on the P cores (nor the heat generated from them). Meaning with E cores taking that load, you can push the P cores further.
3) You are assuming the task scheduler is bad. It now is ~1000x faster and has way more information to use at its disposal. It might screw up, but that is just an assumption you are making.
4) You are assuming that Intel would charge less if they were forced to spend the money to make separate silicon to drop the E cores. Pricing, if done properly, is based on what the market will pay for -- not on the amount of silicon used.
5) You are ignoring the new API that lets programmers put all the code only on the P cores (or only E cores), meaning your whole point is already considered and can be addressed in full using no E cores (this does require the software to be updated though).