I wonder why no 95w sku with edram? Maybe because they expect consumers who buy top end won't use it at all?
I wonder why no 95w sku with edram? Maybe because they expect consumers who buy top end won't use it at all?
I would not put any faith in there actually being a 95W SKU at launch. Any performance and power numbers are worthless at this point.Heck, I'm just glad that there is a 95W SKU. That should mean a nice boost in performance over Haswell for the Skylake Tock. Or, it could mean that AVX512 will be available on some at least the top i7 bins.
Any performance and power numbers are worthless at this point.
I wonder why no 95w sku with edram? Maybe because they expect consumers who buy top end won't use it at all?
Core i7 4771 is a 84W SKU that's locked. It's not hard to see 95W Skylake is a DIRECT successor to that.I would not put any faith in there actually being a 95W SKU at launch.
I wonder why no 95w sku with edram? Maybe because they expect consumers who buy top end won't use it at all?
mikk - where is this slide from, there's no logo?
http://www.cpu-world.com/news_2014/...s_of_Intel_Xeon_E3-1200_v4_v5_processors.htmlAt the end of 2015 or at the beginning of 2016, Intel will introduce BGA versions of Xeon E3-1200 v5 chips with Premium graphics, featuring GT4 GPU and 128 MB eDRAM. The processors will have 4 CPU cores, and support only DDR4 memory.
Core i7 4771 is a 84W SKU that's locked. It's not hard to see 95W Skylake is a DIRECT successor to that.
Hopefully there is a 2+4e SKU- that would be great for gaming HTPCs.
I am struggling. Can someone explain what 4+2 and 2+2 refer to? Thread and core count, respectively?
If so, why does the 4 core (and 4 thread?) variant with eDRAM and stronger iGPU only goes upto 65 watt whereas the 'lesser' 4+2 gets a 65 watt variant and a 95 watt variant?
Dont put too much into TDP, since its standard family values.
SB/IB/HW are "95W" as well. Even tho they was 95/77/85W.
If they want to protect the Broadwell K's, it makes sense for them to clock the Skylake 4e's lowerI think it's not the specific TDP number that is interesting, but that 4+4e has lower TDP than 4+2. All TDP numbers taken from the same slide.
So it might turn out that 95 W will actually be 75 W or whatever in the end. But Intel still considers the 4+4e part to be a higher TDP part than the 4+2 part. That is kind of odd, unless the 4+4e part is intended to be clocked lower.
If they want to protect the Broadwell K's, it makes sense for them to clock the Skylake 4e's lower
Even so, the official slide on Broadwell-E we've seen has it listed as a 140W part, yet that is essentially nonsensical, as that is the same TDP as Haswell-E. The move to 14nm alone would reduce the TDP significantly, and core counts aren't changing. Basically, what I'm saying is that even Intel hasn't nailed down the final specifications for Skylake, or Broadwell-E for that matter.They are not worthless if that's an official Intel slide, if not, they yeah, you're right.
I'm still hoping the number of EUs of GT4 will be closer to 128 than 72. Exponential trends like Moore's Law don't work by adding a new (linear) slice every generation!
Cannonlake should allow a 256EU SKU instead of 4 24EU slices (96EUs), which would be 5 (Gen7.5) TFLOPS.