Asterox
Golden Member
- May 15, 2012
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Zen 2 threadripper left Intel in the dust. Zen 3 threadripper ? its hard to imagine.
Hm, we can try to imagine.
Zen 2 threadripper left Intel in the dust. Zen 3 threadripper ? its hard to imagine.
Anything besides JEDEC 1.2V DDR4-3200 is either overclocked or overvolted.I don't want to overclock anything on my next rig, at least not until I know that it is stable at stock settings.
Anything besides JEDEC 1.2V DDR4-3200 is either overclocked or overvolted.
If you dont want to overclock then you need kit like this : https://www.newegg.com/crucial-16gb-288-pin-ddr4-sdram/p/N82E16820156224?Description=ddr 3200&cm_re=ddr_3200-_-20-156-224-_-Product&quicklink=true
How is this done within am4? I mean 19% ipc with better efficiency at same node, with same io in same socket and a bit better fmax to top it off. Crazy stuff.
You can have your cake and eat it.
Good god do we even know reg. Threadripper Zen 3 ? I feel for Intel now![]()
Man, if 5900x has 50% boost in AVX2 workloads I may actually get that instead of used 3950x. My heaviest use is BluRay to HVEC encoding which is highly AVX2 dependent. 3950x would provide 33% more cores compared to 3900X that I have, but 50% boost in AVX2 should make 5900x faster than 3950x in that particular area. Very excited to see actual benchmarks.
Meanwhile, what was the IPC gained by Intel on LGA 1151 (2015) -> LGA 1200 (2020)?AM4 has had a pretty great run.
From Bristol Ridge in 2016 through to Zen3 in 2020. Even within the Zen family, your looking at what? 50+% IPC improvement?
Meanwhile, what was the IPC gained by Intel on LGA 1151 (2015) -> LGA 1200 (2020)?
Yes. The new AGESA code is out in the wild in Beta BIOSes for a fair number X570 boards.I assume since it is a new design that an improved AGESA in a few months from now may bring an extra uplift. (maybe for tests that didn't improve much over Zen2)
I don't know how AT did HEVC testing, why would anyone upconvert 1080p30 to 4K60? That's not something anyone would ever do. But in my own testing ffmpeg HEVC scales linearly up to 8 physical cores. Which is why I run 2 instances of ffmpeg on my 3900x at the same time to maximize throughput. Either way 3950x or 5900x would be a big improvement, I guess I'll see which one would give me most HEVC performance for the buck, maybe rumored 12c24t 65W 5850x would be the best deal if it turns out to be real. Either way, exciting times, super cool to see actual meaningful CPU performance increases every 18 months.It makes sense. Unlike rendering encoding (at least H264 and H265) doesn't really benefit much from core-count past ~10-12 cores. At the very least it likes strong cores a lot more than more cores.
I mean just compare a 3990x to a 3950x The 64 core 3990x unsurprisingly absolutely smokes the 16 core 3950x in tasks like V-ray:
View attachment 32022
Yet in HEVC encoding, there barely is any difference:
View attachment 32023
Hell even the 10900K is really close (while losing significantly in rendering):
View attachment 32016
Base on these results I wouldn't be surprised at all if 5900X beats 3950X in this task.
I think Intel before 2017 was in "5% improvements per gen is enough" mode. Them Ryzen 1 struck and I believe only then They started revving their engines for more performance. But, as a new CPU generation takes five years from inception to final product, we might see Intel bearing fruit to that, hopefully, sometime in 2022... If all goes clockwork. But as the infighting goes on in there, maybe 2023?What we can here "hype", there at Intel is "fear".
If the theory that AMD just tweaked the FPU instead of making it bigger is true, imagine how much can AMD still improve the Zen Family in the future generations? Zen 4 should be brutal and if Intel can't get things working again in time they're in serious trouble.
I think Intel before 2017 was in "5% improvements per gen is enough" mode. Them Ryzen 1 struck and I believe only then They started revving their engines for more performance. But, as a new CPU generation takes five years from inception to final product, we might see Intel bearing fruit to that, hopefully, sometime in 2022... If all goes clockwork. But as the infighting goes on in there, maybe 2023?![]()
Wow, all of them go over 5 Ghz at various points up to 5050 Mhz (ultra briefly) even considering the averages.More 5950X Geekbench 5 scores and bargraphs:
5950x - Geekbench 5 CPU Search - Geekbench
browser.geekbench.com
Wonder if it can do all core 5Ghz OC with normal cooling. Remember last year the 5Ghz hype train collapsed, I was also a victim *facepalm*
Wonder if it can do all core 5Ghz OC with normal cooling. Remember last year the 5Ghz hype train collapsed, I was also a victim *facepalm*