William Gaatjes
Lifer
- May 11, 2008
- 22,916
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I've heard this for ages and yet nothing still changed.
Have we not gotten a jump to 8cores /16 threads for a bargain price the last 12 months ?
It takes some time but we are getting there.
I've heard this for ages and yet nothing still changed.
That's very far and away from the actual manycore processing.Have we not gotten a jump to 8cores /16 threads for a bargain price the last 12 months ?
It takes some time but we are getting there.
That's very far and away from the actual manycore processing.
As of now most consumer tasks are not intended to scale to manycore numbers.It is a start.
a many core scalar cpu for consumer use is not going to happen just like that.
Companies need incentive.
Either government stimulating the development or waiting for market forces.
At a certain point, controlling them is next to impossible. That point is usually when MB vendors have samples.Again, the "leaks" are coming whenever AMD wants them to.
CPC Hardware getting an A0 Summit Ridge silicon was an actual leak.but there are certainly points when you can assume it's an actual leak.
Great, someone is finally starting to get it!unless those SKUs are at 125W TDP.
You're assuming AM4's specifications are built to handle 125W TDP. While some of the higher end boards definitely could and then some, a lot of B350 boards or god forbid A320 boards are already stretching it with the 95W Summit Ridge.CPC Hardware getting an A0 Summit Ridge silicon was an actual leak.
The rest are guerilla marketing.
Great, someone is finally starting to get it!
Even the shittiest AM3+ boards managed to handle 125W SKUs.You're assuming AM4's specifications are built to handle 125W TDP. While some of the higher end boards definitely could and then some, a lot of B350 boards or god forbid A320 boards are already stretching it with the 95W Summit Ridge.
Being an older spec doesn't say much. Requirements for power delivery were stringent enough so that any AM3+ board could handle this much current. We can't say the same about AM4 unless someone here gets an internal document that details AM4's design requirements.Even the shittiest AM3+ boards managed to handle 125W SKUs.
Though PR was 65-95W on the roadmaps.
We'll see how it goes.
Well we should end the discussion here.We can't say the same about AM4 unless someone here gets an internal document that details AM4's design requirements.
You're assuming AM4's specifications are built to handle 125W TDP. While some of the higher end boards definitely could and then some, a lot of B350 boards or god forbid A320 boards are already stretching it with the 95W Summit Ridge.
It would be fascinating to see what Intel / AMD could do with a high-performance RISC-V implementation.
Even the shittiest AM3+ boards managed to handle 125W SKUs.
K12 is a server first ARM core, just like Zen, and you know about the state of ARM servers right now.There was that whole ARM thing they were looking to do. What was that, K12? Yeah, that was it. K12. Kind of MIA right now isn't it? Anyway they might have toyed with the idea of RISC-V but given what happened with K12, I doubt they'll put money down on RISC-V either.
Some of the B350 boards are also pretty sketchy.Some of those 760G boards were pretty sketchy . . .
Some of those 760G boards were pretty sketchy . . .
I feel that AM4 can support up to 225 watts, like the FX, but only on the Z tier.You're assuming AM4's specifications are built to handle 125W TDP. While some of the higher end boards definitely could and then some, a lot of B350 boards or god forbid A320 boards are already stretching it with the 95W Summit Ridge.
You mean X tier?I feel that AM4 can support up to 225 watts, like the FX, but only on the Z tier.
Yeah, MSI boards are trash, we know it.Not really, some X370 have poor power delivery and even 95W TDP is really a lot.
you know about the state of ARM servers right now.
With x86 competition being back, it will be really, really hard for ARM to enter the market.Looking stronger every day, actually. At this point it's a matter of adoption to drive the software ecosystem. Though in terms of market share, they aren't there yet . . but ThunderX2 and um whatever is that Qualcomm chip, actually look fairly potent.
@OP
So 5.1 GHz in a couple of months, eh?
If you're going to fake a slide like that, why won't you go straight to 10 GHz, for that "1st in the world to reach 10 GHz" wow factor?
I don't see that happening on the 12nm node. On the 7? You bet.The OP did not fake the slide, he/she found it on the internet. I found that same slide myself a couple months ago and dismissed it as a fake. However, it's worth mentioning that 5 GHz is perfectly viable for a next-gen Ryzen chip. Overclockers have hit that now with the 7900x. If AMD moves to a performance optimized node for their refresh, I can definitely see them pushing out a 5 ghz chip.
