The score mentioned is for the 8C version:
If this is what AMD is really claiming then Seattle is DOA. It cannot beat the 2013 Avoton in terms of raw performance, and this year we should see the 14nm server Atom, and I'm not even counting Broadwell-D. Maybe they can showcase Seattle in a good light against Bulldozer servers.
That's just SPECInt. Like I mentioned before, it might actually be better to have the 8-core A57 chip for something like webserver duty where you have numerous light tasks constantly demanding attention, rather than a raw-throughput situation where the CPU is constantly pegged at 100% and all resources are under constant utilization. I could see where the Seattle might be more useful for light VM terminal work as well. Under those circumstances, the higher TDP would justify itself, and the lower cost-to-entry would seal the deal.
25% higher TDP and 20% less performance on SPECint at 30% less price doesn't leave much room for doubt that the product is DOA. And given that it was AMD itself that gave the SPECint number, this should be an optimum case for their server chip.
Again, it's just SPECInt. Everyone throws out SPECInt numbers for server/workstation products. The POWER8 promoters threw out less-than-amazing SPEC scores, too, and then spent a lot of time arguing about why performance/watt didn't matter (ironically, the SPEC numbers they threw out there showed very good perf/watt for POWER8, but that's another matter).
8x A57 vs. 4x Broadwell should be interesting.
Clocks will be higher on Broadwell D-1520 at 2.2 base, 2.6 Boost compared with (what I expect) 2.0-2.2 on Seattle. Broadwell of course includes hyperthreading.
Both have a dual channel memory controller but intel's supports 2133 mhz DDR4 while seattle is limited to 1866 mhz DDR4. Both support up to 128 GB RAM.
Seattle has a lot more cache (4 MB L2 + 8 MB L3) vs. the D-1520 (1 MB L2 and 6 MB L3).
Both have integrated dual 10 gb ethernet. Seattle supports 8 SATA3 drives while the D-1520 is limited to 6. However Broadwell D supports 24 lanes of PCIe 3.0 and 8 lanes of PCIe 2.0. Seattle is much more limited with 8x PCIe 3.0.
As far as pricing an performance goes, D-1520 and the top bin seattle are priced identically (ark intel prices are almost always overstated). As far as performance goes I think they will perform pretty similarly.
You're probably right. I would think that most situations where throughput really matters will go to the D-1520, and probably to some Avoton solutions as well.
The issue in in scenarios where CPUs with high IPC/clockspeeds often go idle from lack-of-utilization. People don't want to buy more iron than they need, hence the interest in microservers with boatloads of cores so they can respond to a lot of requests (webserver, database server) without needing a lot of raw computational power per thread to retire tasks. Sure, you still have latency issues and such.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not all that bullish on the A-series Opterons: they suffered too many delays. AMD really needed to hit the market with these things BEFORE Broadwell-D launched to turn a few heads. Launching them side-by-side with Carrizo means AMD is late to the party.
Some people may still find a use for them where AMD's current server offerings make no sense, so that could be a plus. Maybe.
It doesnt matter what they target if nobody buys them. Not to mention how delayed it already is.
Though your post appears to be somewhat troll-ish, there's more here that bears mention: marketing matters.
Some Intel resellers could copy/paste mrmt's posts (with minor editing perhaps) and use that material in sales presentations to convince server customers to stay the heck away from A-series Opterons.
Their SPECInt numbers are lower than dated Avoton products, their listed TDP is higher, and they're delayed. Throw in some unit-distorted bar graphs for effect.
Plenty of middle manager and procurement types will look at that and go "thumbs down!" without even thinking about how the hardware actually performs in a work environment, considering the implications of going with an ARM-based system rather than x86, or anything else that actually might matter. Double this effect if the people holding the purse strings have a good working relationship with the vendor already.
I ran into this effect YEARS ago when interviewing for a tech/sales job I didn't land with an independent reseller that liked to sell people Intel-based machines. The k6 had just come out, I had one, and I was like "do you sell k6 for office apps? Boot magazine had some great benchmarks" and he was all "yeah they aren't compatible, I have a box of k6 chips in the back from replacements I've had to do".
I really wanted to see that box of chips too. I would been happy to take them off his hands! Greedy bastard didn't want to share.
Anyway, AMD is behind the 8-ball (again), this time because their rep has been tarred by the Construction core chips. Unless they have something that is balls-to-the-walls better than what Intel is offering in at least some significant way, it's going to be an uphill battle to get a buyer to actually consider the possibility that A-series Opterons might actually be better than an Avoton quad or a Broadwell-D quad in the same general price range at certain datacenter workloads. Let's face it, Seattle probably won't turn many heads.