and it means a Bulldozer Integer Core occupies 5% of the whole CPU die.
5% is the size of the int core, I didn't say it wasn't. What is wrong is that "5% is the added die area to 'create/add' a second core to an existing core". Plain wrong. And that was the context of it, when someone said "well, it only takes 5% to add another core" - or did you miss the context and just wanted to "correct" something even if it means taking it out of context?
Pop quiz #1: An "int core" is the whole she-bang that you need to add to an existing single core for it to be a dual core, yes or no?
Pop quiz #2: AMD already has a die with 4 cores (normal ones, like Deneb, Propus, etc), if they were to add 4 more cores (making the chip a Bulldozer core), how much more die area would be needed, is it 5% or close?
No and no.
The problem is that you can obviously read slides, but you don't really show any concrete understanding of CPU architecture / design. I don't begrudge you participating in forums, of course, but maybe you can try to leave out participating in pissing matches.
I am not about to repeat myself again (for what would be the 4th or 5th time) about BD architecture, and I don't want to repeat the origin and context of the "5% story", and I don't want to link again to a direct quote from AMD courtesy of Anand.
But that don’t make the Module 50% more than one Phenom Core. If that was true then the whole point of having les silicon (Than two Full Cores) with Bulldozer and better performance will not be possible.
That's the rub, isn't it? How indeed would it be possible? Maybe they are over-promising, maybe they haven't shown all their cards yet. Who knows.
Anand published 5% (he wasn't exactly misled, it came from marketing, but marketing misconstrued something from engineering, because engineering gave a very literal answer to a question posed by marketing, an answer that, while correct, did not capture the 'spirit' of the question, because marketing failed to phrase the question correctly anyway, (obviously because their domains and jargons are different; actually, the question was rather direct, and for marketing people it was more than good enough because they aren't engineers and don't understand the nuances of such questions and statements, since it isn't their job), resulting in failure of communication - there you go, the gist of the 5% story, right after I just said I don't want to repeat it, but I'm at a loss how else to proceed), but then redacted what he said.
Why?
AMD called him out on it. Not Intel. AMD. Anand published a figure so awesome, why wouldn't AMD just let it go? Because it was just too good to be true, and most people who understand CPU architecture and design will not be fooled by it for a second. So AMD pretty much had no choice but tell Anand,
"Hi, actually it's 50%. Thanks. Btw, remember, emphasize the part about IPC improvements from Deneb, our new BD int cores have better throughput than Deneb!"
So 50% is the "non-marketing" reality. It's not as bad as how you say it with " then the whole point of having les silicon (Than two Full Cores) with Bulldozer and better performance will not be possible.". They still have 2 cores that only occupy 1.5x the space. Had they not gone this way, their octo core would take up 8x, whereas now it only takes up 6x (all sizes approximate and only relative to each other). So they did achieve less silicon (they saved 25%), but the performance is still an open question, and only benchmarks will show us whether they actually achieved it as well.